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By June, 2006, I knew it was time to do some pruning. I consulted with Dad in summer. He was in a retirement home at that point. But I knew that his brain tumour had returned and he wasn't 100% cognitively-speaking. I explained that some of the trees were obviously dying, and that neighbours had had trees fall on their house in windstorms. I felt enclosed, too,
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A couple of family member had gone in and confronted my ailing with this tree-hugger issue. I don't know if they thought I was 'ruining the place' as one aunt accused, or if they were upset faced with their own mortality. Things change. Our cells grow old, sick, contract disease, die, and need to be replaced. At some point replacement is not an option.
As the trees are being cut down, some branches experience collateral damage. Others, torn away by a wind without feelings, sit hanging for a year, dangling like that loose tooth you are afraid to yank out. In subsequent winds they fall randomly, more kindling for the fire.
The tamarack tree had lived a long life. But most branches were no longer producing needles. It
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And, when it is time, we stand back, let go and
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There are some pine cones that will not open and begin reproducing until there has been a high enough temperature, i.e., a fire, to let them release their precious seeds. It takes a crisis for them to be drawn out. I found, giving palliative care to my parents, that it is difficult to be the alternate decision-maker.
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In the August of 2006, we has a massive tornado go through central Canada. Many trees fell over, their large, shallow roots exposed to the air. The roots looked like an overturned umbrella unsettled from a young woman's hand by unseen forces. However, the broken, jagged trunks reflected a wicked power in the 2-hour storm. Underneath the trees, animals now gather, and new trees grow in the newly freed space. It is the cycle of life. Some families took weeks to clear up the damage. But the forest continues to grow.
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For some property owners - they have been burning the branches, still. The amount of wood to remove was incredible. It was a massive storm. Nature is a powerful thing. The only thing certain is death and taxes.
1 comment:
We recently had some serious pruning due to wind recently. Amazing what wind can do.
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