Requiem for a tree

My brother-in-law in a treebone.

My brother-in-law in a treebone.

It was a mesquite, 35 or so feet tall, graceful in an awkward way. Craving light, the poor thing crooked its trunk this way and that, having been stupidly planted under a roof and beside a wall. I’ve liked the tree a lot all these years, for its lush green foliage and shade—rare commodities in Las Vegas.

For various reasons, it had to go. And there was only one man for the job.

My brother-in-law, the self-proclaimed Swedish Okie and country bumpkin whom I’ve written about before, single-handedly brought the tree down.

Now you can’t just take a buzz saw to the trunk of a tree in close quarters and yell “timber!” There’s no safe place for the tree to fall, and it’s weight is enormous, full of life juices and wearing a lush canopy of green. There are windows in the proximity, fences, landscapes, tiles, other trees, all of which would suffer damage.

Half the canopy, bundled, bones behind.

Half the canopy, bundled, bones behind.

Brother-in-law started with the canopy, removing all the light branches and a great deal of weight, using a hand saw. He did this while standing on a 10-foot ladder he had strapped onto a 16-foot ladder. Each branch was tied, cut, and lowered to the ground. Bob threw them over the wall. I bundled. When I began, the mound of branches was taller than I am. When I’d tied up a dozen bundles, the mountain of branches was just as high.

The pulley system: easy with the small limbs.

The pulley system: easy with the small limbs.

When it came to the hefty limbs, the lumberjack needed an assistant. The tree was to be dismantled from the top down in bite-sized chunks. A limb was tied, and its rope wound around a lower piece of trunk, pulley-fashion, and Bob was to keep pressure on the rope until it was cut through. When the new log was free, Bob lowered it gently to the ground with the rope. Brilliant system.

Brother-in-law's country house, still under construction.

Brother-in-law's country house, still under construction.

My brother-in-law knows all this because, like any good Swede who has the time and money, he has a country house. That is, he built a house in the forest outside of Stockholm. After clearing the land. Most of it he did himself. He’s still working on it, bit by bit, every summer.

Former mesquite. Future fire.

Former mesquite. Future fire.

The trunk of the mesquite was sawn into 23 gorgeous logs.

Something seems a little missing from my front courtyard now, but only a little. Other than the trunk, the tree’s glory was above the roof. I miss it anyway.

A ladder tied to a ladder.

A ladder tied to a ladder.

©copyright 2000-2008. All rights reserved. Bambi Vincent

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6 thoughts on “Requiem for a tree

  1. and….. brother-in-law will be at my house Saturday….hmmmmmmm
    By the way I think this is the tree I expressed concerns about years ago!
    YELS

  2. A ladder on top of a ladder. How scary!

    Does your courtyard get a new, properly planted tree now?

  3. My big pine in front got a trim and the Euks, in the back, come down tomorrow. Kinda sad. Really like the photos dispersed throughout the blog.

    YELMM&SU

  4. I had a tree in the dreamhills where my childhood lay
    And I’d go there in the wide long days
    And my tree would listen to all that I’d say
    And the sun was shining brightly
    And the sky was smiling

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