We closed on our house in June, 2000, and a few days later a microburst blew apart the large tree off our bedroom. I did not, despite my propensity to draw significance from, oh, black crows blocking my path, gazing at me intently, see this unwelcome development as augury. Stuff happens.
Replacing the tree seemed essential, though, to restore the karmic balance to our new home. I chose a cimmaron ash because ash trees grow quickly, and indeed this one did.
Replacing the tree seemed essential, though, to restore the karmic balance to our new home. I chose a cimmaron ash because ash trees grow quickly, and indeed this one did.
A smart choice, at the time. "The Urban Tree Book," by Arthur Plotnik, published the same year, starts off with the ash. "One of Western civilization's most sacred trees. Among the oldest and largest trees of American towns."
Not anymore. Not so smart a choice, in retrospect.
The emerald ash borer showed up in Michigan in 2002, and soon thereafter a protracted battle began, with regular treatments of the tree fending off continual assaults by the pest. We spent many times more on whatever voodoo potion they shoot into ashes to kill the little green monsters than we had on the tree itself.
That seemed to work. For a few years, I held out hope that my tree, separated as it is from its fellow trees, might be one of the rare survivors. I told myself that the weird signs of distress — sending off all these ugly suckers that I dutifully trimmed back — were caused by the borer treatment itself, which was not always applied expertly, in my amateur opinion.
This past summer a large part of the crown never sprouted leaves. It looked dead. The arborist we consulted said, sure, he could pare back the dead crown, but the tree would look horrible and it would soon die anyway. Having previously condemned the majestic sugar maple in our front yard, I knew I could do this. But I did not plant the sugar maple. The ash I did. You're not supposed to outlive your trees — that's one purpose of planting them. To give shade to generations yet unborn. Not this tree. Since I am taking woodworking, I thought of saving the wood, kiln drying it, making a table, or a baseball bat. But a) that would take a lot of effort b) I'm not good enough to make a table or a baseball bat, yet and c) Owl Lumber sells ash wood.
The tree came down Monday. Part of me wish I'd fled to the gym, to not be party to the removal process. But it seemed smart to stick around while the work was being done. I put in my Airpods and listened to Mozart to drown out the screams of the chainsaws. Advanced Tree Care did the job quickly and efficiently — so efficiently they almost left without trimming another tree back off our roof, but I pointed out the lapse, and that it was in the contract, and a worker went up and took care of it. So I was glad I had stayed.
The space where the tree had been looks surprisingly big. The stump is there — I have to get some stump remover for it. Life is sometimes about planting and looking forward, sometimes about cutting down and letting go.
The emerald ash borer showed up in Michigan in 2002, and soon thereafter a protracted battle began, with regular treatments of the tree fending off continual assaults by the pest. We spent many times more on whatever voodoo potion they shoot into ashes to kill the little green monsters than we had on the tree itself.
That seemed to work. For a few years, I held out hope that my tree, separated as it is from its fellow trees, might be one of the rare survivors. I told myself that the weird signs of distress — sending off all these ugly suckers that I dutifully trimmed back — were caused by the borer treatment itself, which was not always applied expertly, in my amateur opinion.
This past summer a large part of the crown never sprouted leaves. It looked dead. The arborist we consulted said, sure, he could pare back the dead crown, but the tree would look horrible and it would soon die anyway. Having previously condemned the majestic sugar maple in our front yard, I knew I could do this. But I did not plant the sugar maple. The ash I did. You're not supposed to outlive your trees — that's one purpose of planting them. To give shade to generations yet unborn. Not this tree. Since I am taking woodworking, I thought of saving the wood, kiln drying it, making a table, or a baseball bat. But a) that would take a lot of effort b) I'm not good enough to make a table or a baseball bat, yet and c) Owl Lumber sells ash wood.
The tree came down Monday. Part of me wish I'd fled to the gym, to not be party to the removal process. But it seemed smart to stick around while the work was being done. I put in my Airpods and listened to Mozart to drown out the screams of the chainsaws. Advanced Tree Care did the job quickly and efficiently — so efficiently they almost left without trimming another tree back off our roof, but I pointed out the lapse, and that it was in the contract, and a worker went up and took care of it. So I was glad I had stayed.
The space where the tree had been looks surprisingly big. The stump is there — I have to get some stump remover for it. Life is sometimes about planting and looking forward, sometimes about cutting down and letting go.