TREE-LOVER’S DILEMMA

by Gwen Austin Copyright 1998

I love trees-- their sighs as breezes sough through branches; their creaks and groans-- even C-R-R-R-A-C-K s when shrouded by too much ice or snow. I love how they provide homes for critters galore-- birds, squirrels, butterfly larvae. I love the scent of fir, pine, cedar, hemlock. As my fingers touch their bark, I marvel at each species’ uniqueness. I shelter in their shade on a hot summer day. I glory in the artistry of their leafless form silhouetted against winter-pale sunlit sky. I welcome comforting green of conifers when all else huddles in winter-drab. Through the years in our woods, I watch spindly seedlings become thin trees. Year by year, they add girth and height. Some succumb to nature’s forces. Some’s growth becomes static from over-crowding or disease. What does a tree-lover do, when selected trees must go for the sake of the forest? I become a part of the selective process. I carefully study each tree. Is its top good, with well-formed branches? As compared to its neighbors, is it the best? Is its trunk straight and true? Are there scars and damaged bark, inviting harmful insects? At its feet, are struggling seedlings and saplings stretching for more sunlight? What is its approximate age? Is it at or near its prime and optimum growth? What does a tree lover do when its time for cutting? I inwardly groan while each selected tree is felled, limbed, truck-loaded and hauled off for lumber or chips. But, I know that by cutting some trees, a more healthy forest is promoted. I become a forest-lover.


Photo by Gwen Austin

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