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The TREE MAN of Thornlie
In Western Australia, Richard Pennicuik keeps the spirit of Don Quixote alive.
Jim Stiles
jacent homes. Neighbors turned against Pennicuik, blaming him for the late night noise and vandalism.
Three
months passed. Pennicuik maintained his vigil. By now he was almost
beginning to appear as wild and gnarly as the tree. A reporter or two
would drop by occasionally, just to check his progress. He admitted
he’d love a bath. A reporter asked what he missed most. “Privacy,” said
Pennicuik. His salt-and-pepper beard fell over the front of his
tattered shirt. His uncut hair gave him a Rasputin-look. But
“nevermind,” he said. “She’ll be right.”
On March 22, one of the fercest storms in a hundred years struck the Western Austra-
Richard
Pennicuik hardly fits the image of a radical environmentalist. He’s an
Australian of Scottish descent. He spent his life working in the
mines, in the awful oppressive heat of the Western Australia deserts.
His face shows the lines and creases of a life outside.
But
he worked hard and did his bit and looked forward to quiet retirement
on a shady street in the Perth suburb of Thornlie. His front yard on
Hume Road was graced by a magnifcent eucalyptus tree—a gum tree. It is
the predominant tree in Australia. They can be seen across the
continent, from the Pacifc to the Indian Oceans, in a hundred
varieties. All of them have adapted to their environments and
fourished. For Richard, his gum
lia coast at Perth. ABC News Australia reported:
tree provided needed shade in the afternoon and it was pleasant to look at. No more, no less.
And
so the 57 year old man from Thornlie assumed his tree would shade him
for years to come and that it might even outlast him and provide
comfort and pleasure for those who followed him.
But
the Gosnells City Council had a different idea. A few years earlier, a
limb had snapped from a gum tree on Hume Road and fallen on a passing
motorist. The driver was uninjured but the car sustained some damage.
That was enough for the politicians to act. They decided to cut down
ALL the gum trees along Hume Road— twenty-two to be exact, and replace
them with fowering jacarandas which are lovely trees that produce
fragrant violet blossoms in the Spring and are non-native to the
Australian continent.
Pennicuik and others appealed to the council and at frst it appeared their pleas had been
“Homes
have been damaged, power knocked out and hail the size of golf balls
has fallen as a sudden storm swept across the Perth metropolitan
area....roads north and south of the Western Australian capital have
been fooded. There are also widespread reports of property damage
caused by rain, strong winds and hail. Western Power says more than
150,000 properties were without power.”
Through
it all, Pennicuik stayed in his tree. Despite the ferce winds, not one
limb on the gum tree broke. Gratifed and vindicated that he and the
tree had survived the storm, Richard claimed victory. Surely the
Gosnells Council would now spare the tree. After all they had been
through, his eucalypt had earned the right to live and he had earned
the right to come down.
On
March 26, 2010, 109 days after he frst ascended the tree in its
defense, Richard Pennicuik, the Tree Man of Thornlie, touched solid
ground. Reporters returned for the dramatic climax; Pennicuik had this
to say:
heard.
Plans to chop down the Doomed 22 were put on hold. But the Council
members changed their minds again and plans moved ahead to cut down all
the trees, including Richard’s.
“We
have won the constitutional and moral victory by protecting this tree
which has become a symbol of our freedom to rule ourselves by our
constitution and not be ruled over by politicians who rule under the
guise of serving.”
No
one knows for sure just what Pennicuik was thinking as he heard the
news, but something clearly snapped in his head...something so bold and
outrageous, few of us can even imagine contemplating such an act of
defance.
In
the early afternoon of December 7, 2009, Richard Pennicuik leaned an
aluminum ladder against his beloved gum tree, hauled food and water and
sleeping gear and ropes and other basic necessities into the upper
limbs of the eucalypt and announced to the world he would stay there
until the Gosnells Council agreed to spare his gum tree.
The
local media came out and interviewed him from the ground. Richard made
the Six O’Clock News on all the Perth stations. His quixotic quest made
a good “human interest” story. They started calling him “The Tree Man.”
Some admired him, others mocked Richard, most viewers chuckled and
thought he was “a bit mad.” Everyone assumed he’d last a few days, get
hungry and miss a fush toilet and would be on the ground again by the
end of the week. But at the end of the week, Pennicuik was still there,
with no indication he had any plan to abandon his gum tree.
Still,
Christmas was coming and New Year’s Eve—surely he wouldn’t spend his
holidays thirty feet up a tree. But that is exactly what Richard
Pennicuik did.
Christmas came and went. New Years. Australia Day is January 25; Pennucuik was still up there.
As
is usually the case in a world marked by short attention spans, the
story became boring to most after a few weeks. Reporters went away. A
few sympathizers climbed into the lower branches with the Tree Man in
the spirit of solidarity but they got bored too after a day or two and
climbed back down to solid earth.
Late
night teenagers, usually stewed to the gills, began cruising by
Richard’s tree, hurling beer cans, shouting insults and stopping to
urinate on his tree and the lawns of ad-
Six weeks later, on May 6, 2010, the Gosnells Council cut down his tree anyway.
Now,
Richard Pennicuik will stand trial in Armadale Magistrate’s Court next
October for “obstructing the Gosnells City Council.” He faces fnes of
$5000 and $500 for each day he ignored the council’s demand that he
come out of the tree.
For
Richard Pennicuik, he’s happy to be back with his wife, relieved to be
able to take a shower and a shave, but he has no regrets. He misses his
tree and he gave it his best.
But he did it alone.
Isn’t
it odd? We always admire the courageous few, but then we say, “But it
didn’t do any good. Nothing ever changes. Ultimately he just wasted his
time.”
Imagine a thousand protesters surrounding that tree, in solidarity with the Tree Man? What would have happened then?
We’ll never know.
Because it rarely ever happens.
And that’s why the world is the way it is.
Here is the Google Maps street view of Hume Road in Thornlie, taken last year. The tree and any near the street are now gone.
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