Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Date: Fri 19-Dec-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DOTTIE
Quick Words:
Saddler-Oak-tree
Full Text:
Giant Oak Felled To Protect Antique Barn
(with cut)
BY DOROTHY EVANS
Time passes and beloved old trees get older.
Eventually, they may become diseased, blow down in a storm or, for various
reasons, fall to the chain saw.
Their sudden absence leaves a huge hole in the local landscape.
Often, the decision to fell an old tree, though expedient, is a difficult one
for its owner to make. At the least, he wants to be there when it happens.
Attention must be paid.
A Stake In Its Heart
There is a lot more open sky today over Bob Sadler's Valley Field Road tree
farm and residence, now that a giant white oak tree that has stood tall on the
property for more than 200 years has been taken down.
"I didn't like to have to do it, but several limbs threatened to fall on the
old barn roof," Mr Sadler said regretfully as he pointed to one side of the
tree that showed peeling bark and bare, dead limbs.
The side facing away from the barn, however, looked healthy, showing this
year's crop of leaves still clinging to the outer branches.
"At one time, this was supposedly the llth largest tree of its kind in the
state," Mr Sadler said in a phone call made to The Newtown Bee the morning of
December 3.
As he spoke from his house, Tree Masters, Inc, of Danbury were pulling into
the yard, ready to begin the day-long task of felling the oak. It didn't take
them long to get down to business.
While the top limbs were trimmed back by workman Serge Isabel, who was perched
high in a cherry picker, other tree service employees hurried about on the
ground beneath, stacking wood, gathering branches and feeding them into a wood
chipper.
"You'd be amazed at what we sometimes find inside these old trees," one
employee commented, describing a random selection of objects that he'd seen in
the course of cutting an old tree down. Foreign objects that were once
attached to the trunk or left at its base, allowing the tree over time to
simply grow over and around them.
After the bark engulfs such items as bricks, scissors, horse shoes and barbed
wire, they become buried deeper and deeper within the tree.
As it turned out, the old oak on Valley Field Road gave up its own share of
captured artifacts.
"They found two aluminum plates that had once been used to cover big holes,
perhaps to keep out bees," Mr Sadler said.
And a large iron stake was severed by a Tree Masters' chain saw.
"That spike must have been driven 50 or 60 years ago, because they found it a
good foot in," Mr Sadler said.
Before the trunk was taken down, Mr Sadler and a tree service workman measured
its circumference at the standard, state-tree measuring height, which is four
and a half feet off the ground.
The old white oak was 16 feet, 9 inches around and fully 5 feet thick.
A light snow was falling and the air was bitter cold but Mr Sadler stood
outside a good part of the day watching the tree come down.
