If that’s the case, then we’re in trouble if you go by an article in today’s Wall Street Journal.
The story is titled: The Newest Status Symbol for High-Net Worth Homeowners: Trophy Trees, and looks at how the super rich are paying upwards of hundreds of thousands of dollars to bring in huge old trees to their property by helicopter, barge, and flatbed truck.
The appeal of transporting a trophy tree is easy to explain, said Raymond Jungles, a Miami-based landscape architect. For one, a big tree helps mitigate the scale of a very big house. A unique or particularly old tree, like a piece of art, is also a great conversation piece. Lastly, it means high-net-worth buyers don’t have to wait for a newly planted tree to grow on their site.
So much for planting a tree under whose shade you’ll never sit. It’s all about instant gratification, and status.
One landscaper has developed his own technique, which he calls “arbor division,” for moving the largest trees. It involves slicing the tree vertically into several parts using 6-foot-long saws with specially hardened blades, transporting the individual pieces to the site, then reassembling the tree with steel aircraft cable, ratchet straps, and bolts.
He said he came up with his technique of cutting up the tree before transport years ago after some particularly demanding clients insisted that the trees on their site be delivered with their canopies intact rather than stripped back to the trunk. They didn’t want to wait for them to sprout back later.
Again, there’s that need for instant gratification.
The landscaper notes that cutting the trees vertically, leaving each piece with a portion of the root and foliage, transforms them into separate organisms. While the bark around them grows back as one, inside they are effectively separate living trees.
I don’t know anything about trees, but something about this just does not seem right. Taking a tree out of the place where it grew over several years, and then cutting it down and moving it just to satisfy a wealthy homeowner seems unnatural.
We are lucky to have a beautiful oak tree in our front yard that dwarfs our house; I can’t imagine not having it. But someone had the foresight to plant that tree a long time ago, so that it could be enjoyed by future generations, and not by the original planter.
It seems as if these wealthy homeowners have no desire in going down that path.
Perhaps if there is a rule in place, like we have in our township, that you have to plant six new trees if you cut one down, might mitigate the impact of what these wealthy homeowners are doing. Perhaps the number of new trees they have to plant is based on the value of the tree they cut down.
That still doesn’t fix the problem, but at least there is some benefit if this continues to be a trend.
I also don’t like the idea of wealthy people moving large, old trees.
It also reminds me of what happened here in our city regarding old trees that were planted or growing by the side of the road. They need to be cut down because of the need to widen the roads, but environmentalists do not want the old trees cut down.
I think it’s still in a stalemate due to court orders, and legal matters.
It would be nice to be able to transfer them to a different location…
But the idea of moving a tree from some old forest seems wrong.
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I agree completely!
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It definitely doesn’t sit well with me… trees have a spirit and to cut it in portions to transport it ..totally wrong… the statement about living separately beneath the bark once the bark grows back over the cuts doesn’t sit well with me just for vanity and to flaunt your wealth…I have large trees in my garden thoughtfully planted by someone else years ago and I, in turn, am planting trees although I will not see them in all their glory I can witness their growth …for me that is a pleasure…
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I agree with you completely, Carol. It’s a shame that some people want instant gratification…
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Trophy Trees- definitely the most fascinating thing I learned today.
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maybe it’s better than having a trophy head from a jungle hunt…
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It’s their money, so I guess they can do what they want with it, but wouldn’t it be better to contribute something to the world rather than showing everyone how wealthy you are?
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Yes, they can, Pete and that’s the root of the problem sometimes before you flaunt your wealth you should take a step back and see how it is perceived by others…it’s called consideration and in these days of climate change etc a bit of thought should be applied …
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agreed, and as Pete said, there’s got to be better uses for their money…
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can’t argue with your logic, Pete…
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I had never heard of slicing up trees, but moving them at all seems wrong; I feel a story coming on – I am sure the tree could easily wreak revenge by ‘accidentally’ falling on the house or maybe the roots will find their way into the basement…. Have you heard of The Green Man?
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I agree, it just does not seem natural. I have not heard of the Green Man… but I like your premise of the trees seeking revenge. I think the part of Wizard of Oz that scared me the most was when the trees came to life and started attacking Dorothy…
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The Green Man is the spirit of woodlands – an ancient old man who has always been there and you may not notice him disguised as a tree!
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ah… I see. I have never heard of this spirit…
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In the UK it’s more likely we chop down a 500 year old oak for a pointless railway system to knock 20 mins off a journey
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isn’t that what they call progress?
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Just when I thought I couldn’t be more appalled by the flamboyancy of wealth… This is just plain sad. Though it brings me no joy to hear this, I am glad you shared it, Jim, or I may have never known of such atrocities. Just as culpable are the landscapers and arborists who facilitate this for the money it brings with little concern about the right or wrong of their actions. And we wonder why our society is up in arms over income inequality. Next they will be buying immigrant children to be used as “living” garden gnomes. And we will stand by and watch, feeling helpless to stop the rich and powerful.
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it is quite sad, Brad. Trying to be a master over nature – just does not seem like that will end well…
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I dislike this so much and I agree with you. missing the point of a tree and everything that it stands for.
this spring, my city has an initiative to give away 10,00 new baby trees to plant in the city. I think this is more my style and my daughters are each getting 1 for their yards to grow into the future. if you cut down one here you must replace it with two. I think that’s brilliant.
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I’m not surprised that your city has something like these programs in place. It seems like Ann Arbor is forward thinking…
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They are certainly trying
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👍
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I don’t really like this idea. Instant gratification is just going a bit far out!!! I would feel I missed out on too much by not seeing the tree grow over the years. Although not instant, there is gratification in that too.
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Yes, I agree. There is joy in watching something you planted grow from nothing into something. They re missing out on all the pleasure that gives…
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Exactly!
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Trees aren’t meant to be status symbols! This is a ridiculous display of wealth and selfishness, by the entitled, tone deaf people who don’t deserve the place they have in our society. Such a shame the Kardashians’ TV show is ending: they could have had episodes while they all sit around talking rubbish while watching their newly planted 500yo tree wither as they suck the oxygen from its environment…
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I did not know the Kardashian’s show was ending – that’s a bit of good news for the day!
And yes, this tree thing is ridiculous…
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I’m sure I saw the series currently on here being trailed as the final one. I certainly hope that’s right! It probably is, given today’s news that Caitlyn Jenner is running for California Governor – that will give the assorted airheads something to do.
The tree story is so typical of the filthy rich: so much money that they don’t know what to do with it, and laze around trying to find ever more outlandish status symbols.
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👍👍 two thumbs up for both your comments!
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Let those rich old fools have their gigantic trees. Trees are a gigantic pain in the butt. And the larger the tree, the bigger the pain. Every tree requires a lot of care. You have to water them (at least out here in the desert). You have to keep them trimmed. There are leaves to rake. Sometimes they lose large branches, that must be chainsawed. And sometimes they tip over in high winds, and destroy houses, cars, power lines, or people. Trees . . . ugh.
I think that I shall never see,
A sight as hideous as a tree.
A tree whose sucking mouth is prest,
Against the foul Earth’s dirty chest.
A tree that stands in clods all day,
The muck, the yuck, the slimy clay.
A tree that may in summer wear,
Snakes and vultures in her hair.
Upon whose bosom crows have slain,
A robin’s hatchlings, in the rain.
Poems are made by tools like me,
But only heroes chop down trees.
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I knew I could count on you to offer a contrarian view 🙂
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Don’t mind me, I’m just another nut that fell from a tree.
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probably while the tree was in a transit to a rich person’s house…
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Lucky tree, to have such a rich owner.
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too bad you fell off; it may have been a good life…
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Or they would have locked me up in their attic.
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trophy nut…
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Oooh only you! Yes, you are the NUT that fell from the tree! 😄
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Did the nut hit you in the head? Or did you have to smack it, yourself?
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You are trying to get in one more “smack ” before you leave on vacation, aren’t you! 😜
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Well, I think it might bring me good luck on the road. Or at least 40 minutes of pleasure.
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Sorry! 🙂
Hey, don’t miss Jason’s story before you leave. Did you see it on his blog?
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No, I check it out.
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one for the road…
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This is so sad and selfish.
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that says it all…
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I get disgusted when the wealthy are able to circumvent the egalitarian rules that govern the rest of society by buying their way around them. One of these is being able to pay your way onto high occupancy lanes on the highway. If rich people can’t carpool, they should sit in traffic like the rest of us.
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I guess paying to be in less traffic does not bother me too much, although I don’t think I would ever do so. If the money is going towards keeping the highway maintained, that seems like a good way to raise some money. But this tree thing seems ridiculous…
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Oh, right… I wanted to point a finger at Tiger Woods.
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🙂
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Part of the joys of home ownership is watching the trees and shrubs around you grow with you and your family as tiny preciou memories are made. I guess beyond the disturbing technique those homeowners just stripped themselves from these small pleasures of life.
(should be added to the list from the last post)
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I’d say it’s more than a small pleasure… 🙂
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Too much money syndrome. We’ve just planted a Cape Ash which I’ve pot grown since a sapling. It’s so gratifying to watch it grow.
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you are the perfect antidote to the behavior of these wealthy individuals!
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From my youth, I can still remember the tiny blue spruce tree planted in our backyard. My brothers could hurdle it easily. Now it covers at least a quarter of the yard. Nature’s treasures are worth waiting for.
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that’s a great analogy. why mess with nature…
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