Tree sitting

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Tree sitting is a form of environmentalist civil disobedience in which a protester sits in a tree, usually on a small platform built for the purpose, to protect it from being cut down (speculating that loggers will not endanger human lives by cutting an occupied tree). Supporters usually provide the tree sitters with food and other necessary supplies.

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Tree sitters have successfully prevented logging of ancient old growth forests for months at a time, and in some instances have convinced logging companies not to cut trees in some areas. Sometimes, tree sitting is used as a long-term resistance strategy, with activists occupying trees for months or years at a time. On the other hand, tree sitting is often used as a stalling tactic, to prevent the cutting of trees while lawyers fight in the courts to secure the long-term victories.

When tree sitting occurs on private land, it is trespassing. Sometimes logging companies will hire tree climbers to remove trespassers sitting in trees. Although it is the companies' legal right to do so, some treesitters are suing Pacific Lumber to challenge this practice. Most tree sitting in California occurs on private land. In Oregon, where there are more logging projects on public land (National Forests and BLM lands), treesitting is usually not trespassing but treesitters can be fined for violating closure orders or camping limits, or for erecting illegal structures.

[edit] List of tree sits

This list is incomplete.
  • Mikal Jakubal was the first American treesitter. On May 20, 1985 he ascended a Douglas Fir in an area of the Middle Santiam region of Willamette National Forest that was in the process of being clearcut. While shortlived, his treesitting action inspired a group treesitting event by Earth First! activists that lasted from June 23rd to July 20th 1985, when two Linn County, Oregon sheriff's deputies wrestled Marylander Ron Huber from his tree after a daylong standoff. Since its inception in 1985, tree sitting has become a frequently used tactic by forest defenders around the world.
  • In 2002, two US environmental activists involved in tree-sitting protests died in separate accidents. [2] [3]
  • In 2006, following a successful protest lasting over one year, tree sitters in Cathedral Grove (also known as MacMillan Provincial Park), British Columbia, halted the removal of a number of old growth Douglas Fir trees which were scheduled to be to taken down in an attempt to calm traffic and improve the parking facilities.

[edit] Tree Villages

A view of the Fall Creek village showing arial walkway

A Tree Village is an extension of the tree sit/tree house protest, involving several more tree houses.

The Fall Creek/Red Cloud Thunder Tree-Village was a long running example. It was a 6 year occupation of a small timber sale in the Willamette National Forest at Fall Creek Oregon US which ran from February 1998 to November 2003. It comprised seven houses of up to 5 occupants each tied together with rope 'traverses' 200 feet high and up to 125 feet between 'platforms'. This tree village was designed to be totally self sufficient with composting toilets, solar/wind power communications, cargo lines between ground and other sits, individual rappel lines and hydroponic sprout farms. An estimated 1000 activists occupied the trees at various times. The forest occupied during the Fall Creek campaign remains uncut to this day.

Winberry Tree Village in the Willamette National Forest was another long-term occupation undertaken by Cascadian tree-sitters. The village was comprised of two treehouses (160 feet high and 175 feet high) and one suspension structure hung between trees. The Winberry village was occupied for 5 yrs. One tree house was two story, situated in a huge Red Cedar tree. It featured a bottom story built from branches in the manner of a bird's nest as well as a running water system.

[edit] Tree houses

In the United Kingdom permanent tree houses is a common technique. One treehouse BattleStar Galactica at the Manchester International Airport held 12 people.[4] Treehouses can be occupied for a year or more. They often have lock-on points for protestors to chain themselves to during evictions. Tree houses have been used at Newbury bypass.

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