treefall

The fallen eucalyptusI was head­ing back to my desk at work on Thurs­day and noticed a clus­ter of my cowork­ers look­ing out a win­dow. There’s a lit­tle access road right out­side. Usu­ally it doesn’t have a full-grown euca­lyp­tus tree fallen across it, but this day it did.

Trunk of fallen treeI don’t have my cam­era with me most of the time, but Declan had his. He was part of the vol­un­teer crew who wres­tled the tree to the curb, but he also man­aged take these shots.

[ View the entire set on Flikr ]

Not much later the building’s safety per­son had issued a warning:

Just a heads-up, lit­er­ally: high winds are blow­ing down euca­lyp­tus branches and trees around cam­pus. About an hour ago, an entire tree broke off and fell across the access road… (Very for­tu­nately, no peo­ple or vehi­cles were in its path.) Until the winds die down, please be sure to watch and lis­ten for break­ing branches and avoid walk­ing through the euca­lyp­tus groves.

The UCSD cam­pus is home to over 200 thou­sand of these trees in plant­i­ngs that date back a hun­dred years, back to a euca­lyp­tus mania when euca­lyp­tus were planted all over South­ern Cal­i­for­nia, includ­ing three mil­lion just a few miles up the coast in what’s now Ran­cho Santa Fe.

If you live in this part of the state you’ve prob­a­bly heard the sto­ries: that the trees are call wid­ow­mak­ers because they drop their branches if you look at them wrong, that they’re just giant non-native weeds that take up valu­able space…bad things like that.

I won­der if the bad rap on the first count is entirely deserved. For sure, some euca­lyp­tus are brit­tle, and there have been three times in the last year alone when I was within fifty feet or thirty sec­onds of being taken out by falling euca­lyp­tus. But with almost a quar­ter mil­lion of them on cam­pus and mil­lions of them in town it’s inevitable that a few of them keel over or fall apart. Are they that much worse than oaks or other trees that peo­ple plant by the millions?

I did a quick and totally infor­mal sur­vey of some head­lines, euca­lyp­tus ver­sus oaks. Maybe the eucs are totally bad news. May they’re not that much worse than other species. What­ever the case, they def­i­nitely can be gor­geous trees.

Shad­ows cast over tow­er­ing euca­lyp­tuses (Euca­lyp­turs kills woman in Old Town San Diego, The San Diego Union-Tribune–Jan­u­ary 8, 2003)

2 killed in ‘freak acci­dent’ : Falling oak crushes pickup on County Line Rd. (Oak tree, The Post and Courier (Charleston, N.C.)–April 16, 2008)

Tree check asked after acci­dent (Euca­lyp­tus kills woman in parked pickup truck, Evening Tri­bune (San Diego, CA)–December 25, 1987)

Man killed by falling tree (Oak tree falls onto pickup truck, News Sen­tinel, (Knoxville, TN) Decem­ber 28, 2008)

$160,000 awarded in Zoo death (Award given to fam­ily of girl killed by falling euca­lyp­tus, The San Diego Union–August 2, 1986)

Girl killed by falling tree at Boy Scout camp (Oak tree, Asso­ci­ated Press, via MSNBC–August 10, 2005)

Half of the inci­dents above involved pickup trucks. Weird. Maybe that’s the deadly com­bi­na­tion: pickup trucks and large trees. Like mobile homes and tornadoes…

January 31 2009 05:45 pm | Categories: landscapeplacesrambles | Tags:

4 Responses to “treefall”

  1. Helen - patientgardener on 01 Feb 2009 at 3:32 am #

    I hate strong winds more than I do snow. I have had some big trees close to houses I lived in in the past and they have really scared me when it is windy.

  2. tina on 01 Feb 2009 at 5:55 am #

    They can be dan­ger­ous for sure. We’ve lost a ton of trees here due to ice-also a dan­ger and a mess.

  3. Jenny on 01 Feb 2009 at 10:16 am #

    Inter­est­ing. We have prob­lems with some oaks here in the south, most notably the water and lau­rel oaks. They die from the inside– you have to take a core drilling to see if they’re on their way out. Scary.

    My pecan tree is the worst for throw­ing branches. I’m not sure if it’s all hico­rys, but pecans are notorious.

  4. lostlandscape on 01 Feb 2009 at 10:37 am #

    Helen and Tina–Trees aren’t exactly prac­ti­cal in the safety sense, but could you imag­ine life with­out them? I do, how­ever, try to avoid path­ways through the groves when the weather is push­ing branches around.

    Jenny, with mil­lions of trees, that’s a lot of cor­ing! I noticed in the euc that fell on Thurs­day that half the trunk had died–probably not much help in keep­ing the thing upright. Hope­fully the pecan is a safe dis­tance from the house…

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