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The organization The Last 6,000, which is dedicated to preserving Seattle’s oldest and largest trees, organized a gathering on Wednesday night to mourn the tree’s potential loss.
activist Droplet has called a Red Cedar in Seattle’s Wedgwood neighborhood home. The tree on NE 88th St, was scheduled to be cut down, that is, until Droplet climbed up into it on Friday morning.
The jacaranda tree is a beautiful tropical tree that produces clusters of fragrant purple panicle-shaped blooms and arching branches that form a canopy shaped like an upturned umbrella.
SEATTLE (KOMO) — Droplet is on day four of living in a large red cedar tree in Seattle’s Wedgwood neighborhood, and the activist said they plan to stay in the branches until assurances are ...
Seattle officials said it’s unlikely the company hired to cut down the tree will get their permit by the end of the day Friday. More on Seattle trees: City Council passes stronger tree ...
he knows that that tree can come down” KING 5 asked the Seattle Department of Construction and Inspections (SDCI), about the video and the comments made. SDCI's response is below: "We do not ...
A Seattle woman is perched atop a 200-year-old red cedar tree that is scheduled to be cut down to make room for six new affordable housing units, according to a report. The activist, nicknamed ...
Also known as the fern tree because of its fern-like foliage, the jacaranda tree (Jacaranda mimosifolia) is a deciduous ...
Last spring, Seattle rushed to pass a new tree ordinance that claimed to include robust tree protection. In contrast, the city’s own Urban Forestry Commission condemned the ordinance as ...
It’s an entry into a delicate battle Seattle must navigate for years to come. Mayor Bruce Harrell told the editorial board that he is interested in finding a compromise to save the tree and ...
masked activists in Seattle have taken residence in the branches of an old, thick cedar tree to prevent it from being cut down to make way for new homes. The protest on a private lot is the latest ...
What would Los Angeles be like without the nearly 30,000 jacaranda trees on city streets? It depends on who you ask. “The tree stands for California at its worst: all flash, no substance ...