"Earth First" tree sitter - 0, Mother Earth and gravity - 1

glenn1

Lifer
Sep 6, 2000
25,383
1,013
126
Why "tree sitting" may not be the best idea

SAN FRANCISCO(AP) - A man with the environmental activist group Earth First! has died after a fall of more than 50 feet from a redwood tree, raising concerns about the dangers of tree sits, often used to stop logging operations. The man, whose identity hasn't been released but went by the forest name "Naya," had only been in the tree for about 12 hours on Tuesday evening when he fell, according to Dennis Davie of the Santa Cruz contingent of Earth First!

"Santa Cruz Earth First! is deeply saddened by this tragic event, we never like to lose an activist," said Davie. "This was a young man in his first tree-sit."

Earth First! has been staging tree-sit protests against logging company Redwood Empire's operation in the Ramsey Gulch area about 20-miles south of San Jose since August. Naya had just come to the area to join the protest on Monday night and had climbed into his tree Tuesday morning, Davie said. On Tuesday night, for an unknown reason, he fell out of the tree and was taken by helicopter to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, where he was soon pronounced dead. The county coroner's office had not determined the cause of death or the man's identity Thursday.

The man isn't the first to be injured in a tree-sit protest. In April, 22-year-old Beth O'Brien of Portland died after falling from a tree in Mount Hood National Forest in Oregon. In September 1998, David "Gypsy" Chain became the first California Earth First! activist to be killed during a tree-sit protest when the Humboldt County tree he was living in was felled by a logger. "They think they're on a mission and they don't consider the risks involved," said Jim Branham, a spokesman for Pacific Lumber Co., which has about six tree sitters currently on its logging property in Humboldt County, 30 miles southeast of Eureka. "I do think they view their actions as being somehow heroic, instead of dangerous or illegal."

Davie said he acknowledges that tree sitting is dangerous and that there is a heroic nature to putting one's body on the line to protect something. But he said that all Earth First! protesters, including Naya, are given training on how to remain safe and healthy during tree sits. Davie said Naya came to the Earth First! camp saying that he had rock climbing experience and after talking with other members of the group for several hours they determined he was capable of climbing the tree. He was also given some training on the ground before going up. Normally, tree sitters are given two days of training.

"They believed he climbed well, but it still was his first tree sit," Davie said.

Earth First! activists have protested logging operations in the Ramsey Gulch area for more than two years. The logging company issued a statement Wednesday saying its employees were saddened by the death.

Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in trees, hoping to call attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous tree sit, Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up in a redwood in Northern California to save it from being cut down for lumber. She came down in 1999 after Pacific Lumber Co. agreed to leave the tree standing in return for $50,000 to make up for lost logging revenue.



 

Mutilator

Diamond Member
Aug 22, 2000
3,513
10
81
Originally posted by: glenn1
Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in trees, hoping to call attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous tree sit, Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up in a redwood in Northern California to save it from being cut down for lumber. She came down in 1999 after Pacific Lumber Co. agreed to leave the tree standing in return for $50,000 to make up for lost logging revenue.
Hmm... there's something funny about that. She saved the tree but was out $50,000. I wonder how many trees were used to make that money? ;)

Stories like this kinda give new meaning to being hit with a stupid stick huh? ;)


 

IGBT

Lifer
Jul 16, 2001
17,976
141
106
Yup..they want to save the trees so the pyromentalists can burn it down.
 

Descartes

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
13,968
2
0
Originally posted by: Mutilator
Originally posted by: glenn1
Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in trees, hoping to call attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous tree sit, Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up in a redwood in Northern California to save it from being cut down for lumber. She came down in 1999 after Pacific Lumber Co. agreed to leave the tree standing in return for $50,000 to make up for lost logging revenue.
Hmm... there's something funny about that. She saved the tree but was out $50,000. I wonder how many trees were used to make that money? ;)

How many people, aside from those in organized crime, pay out that much cash.... in cash?

Stories like this kinda give new meaning to being hit with a stupid stick huh? ;)

Sure does :)

 

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
20,551
2
81
Originally posted by: IGBT
Yup..they want to save the trees so the pyromentalists can burn it down.

I didn't know my activist movement had a name! :D




More proof, that nature has a sense of irony (remember the activist that got mauled by a bear?)
 

Nitemare

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
35,461
4
81
The logging company issued a statement Wednesday saying its employees were saddened by the death. :D

LOL, yeah right

It's funny how they forgot to mention the new logging contests, of tree shaking until tree sitter tosses cookies, and the 2AM challenge of tree climbing then blasting an air horn to see how far you can make the tree sitter jump.

They had just be glad that I am not in the lumber business, I would have you either arrested or shot for trespassing.
 

yakko

Lifer
Apr 18, 2000
25,455
2
0
I guess she thought safety was only for evil corporations. Of course if they allowed us to grow industrial hemp we would not need to cut down that many trees.
 

Nemesis77

Diamond Member
Jun 21, 2001
7,329
0
0
Originally posted by: Mutilator
Originally posted by: glenn1
Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in trees, hoping to call attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous tree sit, Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up in a redwood in Northern California to save it from being cut down for lumber. She came down in 1999 after Pacific Lumber Co. agreed to leave the tree standing in return for $50,000 to make up for lost logging revenue.
Hmm... there's something funny about that. She saved the tree but was out $50,000. I wonder how many trees were used to make that money? ;)

Stories like this kinda give new meaning to being hit with a stupid stick huh? ;)

"yeah, you can come down, we wont cut down this tree. You have our word"
"Damn, I spent two years up there.... Hey, wait a second!"
"OK guys, tie her down! Bring in those chainsaws, this tree is going down!"

:D
 

Aceman

Banned
Oct 9, 1999
3,159
0
0
Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in trees, hoping to call attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous tree sit, Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up in a redwood in Northern California to save it from being cut down for lumber.

I wonder how many trees to took to make the platform they sit on?
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,407
8,595
126
Originally posted by: Aceman
Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in trees, hoping to call attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous tree sit, Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up in a redwood in Northern California to save it from being cut down for lumber.

I wonder how many trees to took to make the platform they sit on?

the platform was made of plastic so she was supporting some sheik rather than the evil logging companies :)