Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trees. Show all posts

Monday, February 21, 2011

Monkey Puzzle Tree

Little did we know what a prize we had when we moved into our house.  Towering over our front yard and roof (and sidewalk to boot) was a 50+ foot monkey puzzle tree.
While we did not love the tree, we figured it was sorta cool being that it had some history behind it.  The Monkey Puzzle Tree comes from Chili originally and was brought to Portland for the 1905 Lewis and Clark World Fair.  Pretty cool, eh?  Now these trees are gorgeous in the wild as seen below (image from here)
and are also really pretty when they are young trees or well-maintained.  valuable too; I have seen 12" starts at local nurseries for around $40.
this image from here
But ours was well, old and well, not pretty.  Kinda the sore thumb sticking out. Not that our landscape was well, landscape.  More just some concrete, shrubs and dead grass




The old monkey just engulfed the house.  So we were wondering what to do about it.  Cool tree but not looking so hot anymore.  Well, after a wind storm knocked a branch off onto the sidewalk, we knew we had to do something.  This was winter '07/'08.  The branch easily weighed several hundred pounds and would have killed anyone in its path.   The branches are spiny and sharp and can cut someone as well.
After having about 10 arborists out to give there verdict, we decided that it was time to cut the beast down.  Many arborists' said it was not healthy and had probably 5-10 years of life left as it was nearly 100 years old (after we cut it down we counted 96 rings, meaning 96 years old-just after the lewis and clark exposition) which probably meant that it was planted right when the house was built.  If we kept it, it would need a dead heading right away so that it was safe and dead branches would not continue to fall and possibly kill people.  Well, being that it was as much to dead head as cut the beast down, we decided that it was best to bring the king down.  We also were planning a full re-landscape in summer 2009 and the beast was not part of the plan.
However, we are eco-friendly people and the thought of just grinding and dumping the beast (gorgeous wood) was gnawing at our conscious-es.   So, I was able to find a company that came and harvested most of the trunk once we cut it down and even paid us a couple hundred as well!
Here are pictures of the beast coming down in Fall 2008.  It took a crew of four all day, and don't worry, all the wood that was ground (branches) were taken to the local wood recycler for re-use.









 







After it was all gone, the yard looked bare, but we were breathing a sigh of relief, and well, in my style, dreaming and talking of the next project...landscape (see here, here and here).
And my dad stole a little piece of stump (thanks for being sneaky) to make us this cool picture frame for Christmas 2009

 We even saved a couple pieces of the stump that we think will be cool to make something with someday-end tables???   Of course, they have now been outside for about 2 1/2 years so will need a good sanding, leveling and maybe some shellac on the top?  Luckily, they have been kept pretty dry so may even be pretty dry by the time we are ready to do a project with them.  Maybe put them in the retro 40s-50s basement when we remodel...that could be pretty dreamy :)
for now they make great old bike tire and rake storage

super cool lines where the branches grew out of the trunk
Did I mention that we are still reaping the "rewards????" of the beast?  When digging the hole for the japanese maple we planted in place of the beast or reigning king, we came across a 8-10" diameter root.  Digging that up was a bi-atch-pretty much broke a chain saw in the process. Also, we really fun to go around it when laying pipe for the sprinkler system.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

They came in twos

Well,
   It's been awhile since I have posted but darn it, we've been busy and I've been tired (pregnancy does that sort of thing to you).  Anyways, changes include hiring a friend, Scott to help us out with siding and various other projects that are driving me crazy or are beyond our current level of patience which seems to be getting shorter by the day.  He re-sided the entire porch-quite a task, just finished cutting out rafter tails to size in prep for the gutters that will hopefully be up by next Friday (we hired this out as well-can you tell we are getting burned out?).  Other projects include help with patching the cut off window sills on the exterior of the house which I feel will make the house look so much better.  He is amazing!
They came in twos you ask?  Well, we finally took a trip to Portland Nursery last weekend to pick up the much debated conifers for our front yard.  My brother, the landscape architect, initially wanted us to get conifers that would eventually reach 60 or so feet tall and just be huge in our opinion while we wanted something more on the dainty side.  After much research, we found that the mountain hemlock was just the right size, getting only ~8' wide and 20ish feet tall (about 6 feet tall right now).   We planted them last weekend and love 'em...one is a little crocked at the top but I feel it adds to the charm!   They frame the house very nicely.



 ~mtn hemlock on south side of house near column~

~mtn hemlock on north side of house near column~
If the rain holds out for us, we hope to finish painting the new siding tomorrow (we caulked, sanded patched holes and painted today until the rain came) so that we can plant all the plants by the garage that make the house look like a nursery.  
Happy Fall!  I love fall!  My favorite season!