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Confessions of a Ninja tree sapper - planting trees
American Forests, Nov-Dec, 1991 by Paul Quinnett
I admit it. I'm a tree sapper. When I'm working the night shift dressed in dark clothing to avoid detection, I suppose I qualify as a ninja tree sapper. So go ahead, arrest me.
But firstly you'll have to catch me. And since I do most of my diggings at dawn before most people have one eye open, it'll take a very early riser to stop me. Besides, I'm usually in and out of a job before you can make coffee.
Yep, just like the military sapper who trenches in and blows up installations with high explosives, I trench in seedlings and saplings and blow up the landscape with trees--sometimes with permission, sometimes without. Frankly, without is more exciting. I see a spot needs a tree and, dig dig dig, I'm in there with a seedling, a soaking shot of water, and out again before the landowner knows what hit him. It's probably worng, but there you are.
It all started back when I was a kid. One day I watched my father plant a lemon bush and a pecan tree on our barren little place in southern California, and before I was old enough to boost hubcaps, we had a steady supply of lemonade, and nut pie. Nut pie was my favorite. Right then I knew I'd grow up to be a tree sapper.
At first I planted trees only on my own property. My wife and I bought one of those track homes where they don't pour the foundation until all the bushes and trees have been bulldozed and the soil's been scraped smooth as a tennis court. Except for a pale green three-bedroom house square in the middle, out lot looked like a Martian desert. We had to do something. A half dozen trees helped, and the next 30 made our postage-stamp lot start to feel earthlike. Within a few years, I had the place looking like a rainforest. My wife cracked, "If you don't stop this tree planting pretty soon, I'll have to call the Forest Police."
I wan't sure there was a Forest Police, but if threw a scare into me. I changed my tactics. I started planting early in the morning, you know, when no one was around. That's when I slipped across the line.
It was real innoncent at first. I had a few small aspens left over from a backyard caper and before I realized what I was doing, I was over in my neighbor's yard, planting them in the back of his garden. The sun wasn't even up, but hey, this guy didn't have a single tree along his whole back fence! Besides, he was the kind of numbskull citizen who wouldn't notice a 100-foot Douglas-fir if it shop in the middle of his driveway. And believe me, his place was begging for something deciduous. I guess what startled me was the high I got sneaking those sprigs in when he wasn't looking. A real thrill. And it didn't go away; every time I'd see one of those aspens crow out another row of radishes, I'd get a whole new rush.
Then we bought five acres in the country. Heavily wooded. About 2,000 pine trees surrounded our digs. I was in hog heaven. I thought i was cured. But I wasn't. Two weeks after the house was finished, the craving came back:
Where was I going to plant trees? That's when I went round the bend and got into the sapper racket in a big way.
When I first started out, I'd swipe saplings from the Burlington Northern railroad rights-of-way before the cleanup crews came along to cut them down or poison them out. Pulling them dry-root style late in the fall, I could lift a couple dozen small pines and aspens in the morning and have them all sapped into new locations before nightfall. But even if trees are easy to lift, you still need places to plant them. So you have to look around, scope things out, case the barren places, and, you know, get familiar with your turf.
Like down the road from where I live, there's this little spring-fed pond that sometimes dries out in August after a hot summer. Once it's bone dry, you can't find a mallard for five miles. I know the guys who own the land (a builder and an accountant). They're smart guys, and I've had chicken at their place, but they don't know beans about trees or shade or how, with just a few minutes' work and some decent root growth, they could have a first-rate, cool-water pond that would give everybody in the neighborhood a hand up. So a few years back, I sapped in a couple of mountain ashes and a lilac bush. Call it a signature job.
What really sent me beyond the pale was finding out my county extension agent was in the mob. For a few measly bucks, these guys will get you all the little trees you want. You can go pick them up, or they'll mail them to you--all legal like. You open them up. Suddenly, there you are--a shovel in one hand and a bucket of saplings in the other. It's enough to make anybody a little dangerous. The county boys will even send you a sapper's instruction sheet--which, of course, an old pro like me needs like another hole in the head.
One time--this'll kill you--I got a shipment of Foundation spruce trees I didn't know what to do with. But then I remembered my neighbor. (It's hard not to remember this neighbor, especially since I can hear him playing pickleball on his cement court every evening all summer long.) This neighbor's a lawyer. I love a lawyer same as everyone else, so I says to myself, 'Self, why not see what happens when you plant a bunch of spruce trees smack dab on a property line--the one between you and a lawyer.' If the poet's right--that "good fences make good neighbors"--then a spruce forest between us ought to make us positively delirious.