The Trouble Tree

The carpenter I hired to help me restore an old farmhouse had just finished a rough first day on the job. A flat tire made him lose an hour of work, his electric saw quit, and now his ancient pickup truck refused to start. While I drove him home, he sat in stony silence.

On arriving, he invited me in to meet his family. As we walked toward the front door, he paused briefly at a small tree, touching the tips of the branches with both hands. When opening the door, he underwent an amazing transformation. His tanned face was wreathed in smiles, and he hugged his two small children and gave his wife a kiss.

Afterward, he walked me to the car. We passed the tree and my curiosity got the better of me. I asked him about what I had seen him do earlier.

“Oh, that’s my trouble tree,” he replied. “I know I can’t help having troubles on the job, but one thing’s for sure, troubles don’t belong in the house with my wife and the children. So I just hang them on the tree every night when I come home. Then in the morning, I pick them up again.”

He paused. “Funny thing is,” he smiled, “when I come out in the morning to pick ’em up, there ain’t nearly as many as I remember hanging up the night before.”

 

Trimming Trees From The Sky

Who doesn’t need a 40-Foot chainsaw that hangs from a Helicopter?

Have you ever heard of using a helicopter to trim trees? Check out this segment on a contractor hired by the Johnson City Power Board to maintain clearances on unreachable power lines from the most unlikely of places.

 

Excavator Mulchers

Now this is a mulcher! Watch it swallow an entire 30-foot-tall mature spruce tree in seconds.

What do you do when you have a bunch of trees you need taken down? You can cut them down one by one, but that takes a lot of work and is really no fun at all. Now the excavator mulcher by Denis Cimaf does the job in just seconds and is a lot more fun. These bad boys can eat a tree in moments!

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Incredible Street Art Illusion

Daniel Siering And Mario Shu’s Incredible Street Art Illusion

Street Art Illusion

Perhaps one of the best street-art interventions of the year comes at the very end. Daniel Siering and Mario Shu developed a unique strategy for their site-specific public project in Potsdam, Germany. By wrapping a tree and covering the wrapping with incredibly detailed spray-paint, the duo manages to perfectly capture a stunning sinhle-point perspective which gives the illusion that the tree is bisected, with the top half mysteriously floating above the fields and horizon in the background.

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