Tag Archives: Westport CT storm of 2010

Woodman, Don’t Spare That Tree!

Deej Webb identified 5 “homicidal trees” on the Merritt Parkway — big ones, with the potential to fall and kill someone.

And that was before this month’s monster storm.

The 1980 Staples graduate grew up with the mindset of most Westporters:  Suburbia = trees = wonderful.  You didn’t think about the presence of trees, any more than you questioned air or cookouts.

But on his daily commute to New Canaan — he teaches high school history there — Deej saw trees that could kill him, as easily as they killed several motorists in the past few years.

He saw CL&P crews trimming branches around power lines — but leaving enormous trees standing.  The temporary fixes seldom worked.  “Four times a year, I lose power,” Deej says.  “It’s completely preventable.”

As he looked — really looked — around Westport, he realized trees are not always aesthetically pleasing, either.  Deej says that trees block what once were majestic vistas.  As an F. Scott Fitzgerald aficionado, he knows that when the author lived on South Compo, next to what later became Longshore, there were no trees at all — the author saw clear down to the Sound and across to Long Island, providing inspiration for several “Great Gatsby” scenes.

This tree sits 2 yards from my patio. I hope it doesn't kill me.

As a student of history, Deej knows that from colonial days right through to the early part of this century, there were far fewer trees in Westport.

“What we’re seeing here today is not New England,” Deej says. “It’s a man-made arboreal paradise.”

When he discussed his counter-intuitive — if not heretical — ideas with friends, they thought he was joking.  Then they looked around, saw what he saw, and figured he was maybe half-kidding.

After last week’s storm, they stopped laughing.

“Everyone I know spent a lot of time clearing their property,” Deej says.  “And now everyone is noticing how many of their neighbors’ trees  threaten their own property.”

Deej and his friends have a few ideas.  They want to work with the town to identify dangerous trees, and find discretionary funds to cut them down.  They envision a volunteer effort involving civic groups, Staples sports teams and Boy Scouts (though, Deej notes, “you can’t really hand chainsaws to kids”).

They would like to post photos on “06880” and WestportNow.com, asking:  “Why is this tree still standing?”

They hope to petition the state to take care of dangerous Merritt Parkway trees.

Yet for all his dreaming, Deej is a realist.

“I know it’s expensive,” he says.  “And I know people in Westport have fought the removal of a single tree at Longshore.  They’ll chain themselves to trees to save them.

“The environmentalists will talk about the importance of trees’ roles in oxygen.”

So he’ll settle for this:  A townwide discussion of whether Westport is overly enamored of trees.

“Is this a crackpot idea from someone with too much time on his hands?” he asks.

“Or is it an idea whose time has come?”

(“06880” readers:  Answer those questions by clicking the “Comments” link at the top and bottom of this post.  To contact Deej directly, email him:  rnwebb@optonline.net)

If You Ever Wonder Why You Need Insurance…

…these photos by “06880” reader Andy Udell offer proof.  All were taken near his home on Ellery Lane, off Prospect Road.