
Plant Blindness
Benedict Furness explains an important but underappreciated phenomenon
Yes, at first I was like: what the hell is this supposed to be? Isn’t it obvious that plants can’t see! [laughs] One of my professors brought the term up at the end of a lecture, more as food-for-thought. And it made me think. I sat down in the library and looked it up. Turns out, it is a term which is actually circulating academic discourse. And the more I read about it, the more I realized: I am affected!
Well, for instance when I walk to the bus stop, I don’t pay attention to the trees I am passing. As a biology student, I am concerned with plants a lot, but in my daily life – like most people – I barely notice them.
Yes, sure. To spend your life gazing at treetops, ignoring street signs and timetables, is definitely not the best survival strategy in Western society. And for many people, this idea might even sound crazy. But with all of the distractions of modern life, the plethora of artificial stimuli we currently turn our attention to – considering the beeps, buzzes and blue lights radiating from our pockets and smart watches – is it too much to ask that we replace some of our attention with something natural? That might improve your sleep far better than any smartphone app.
I now count the trees I pass. It’s a conscious battle to retrain my brain. And I draw plants. In general, I am more grateful about what they do for us. There are so many options to tackle your own plant blindness. You might want to sign up to a local allotment society, start a community garden, you might even just want to work out how to keep this one plant alive which you have at home.



The video is a result of a course on how to communicate science creatively and academically, using digital imagery. The topic was: Seeing the Unseen. Plant blindness was the perfect match for this. The course asked me to produce my own footage, that’s why there are lots of random shots of plants and me traveling through the world. But it gave it a natural personal twist I guess. I wrote and recorded the text first. Afterwards, it was a pretty painstaking process of cutting the clips and voice over together and shuffling them around.
For once you could say that we have some sort of evolutionary hangover. Studies have shown that plant blindness is more common in men than in women. This goes back to the traditional roles within archaic societies. Men would go hunting, women would look for specific plants, to collect them. So there is a biological aspect. The other explanation is that our culture is contributing to plant blindness. In the West, our interaction with plants is broken. It’s still there, but more disguised. We call our environments concrete jungles, for instance.
That is very well put! And is probably true. I keep it with Cicero, who said: If you have a library and a garden, you have everything you need.