Tree Sitting

Tree sitting is a form of environmentalist civil disobedience in which a protester sits in a tree, usually on a small platform built for the purpose, to protect it from being cut down (speculating that loggers will not endanger human lives by cutting an occupied tree). Supporters usually provide the tree sitters with food and other necessary supplies. Tree sitters have successfully prevented logging of ancient old growth forests for months at a time, and in some instances have convinced logging companies not to cut trees in some areas. Sometimes, tree sitting is used as a long-term resistance strategy, with activists occupying trees for months or years at a time. On the other hand, tree sitting is often used as a stalling tactic, to prevent the cutting of trees while lawyers fight in the courts to secure the long-term victories. When tree sitting occurs on private land, it is trespassing. Sometimes logging companies will hire tree climbers to remove trespassers sitting in trees. Although it is the companies' legal right to do so, the tree climbers occasionally cause harm to the sitters that resist efforts to end their trespassing, and in at least one case it has resulted in death. Most tree sitting in California occurs on private land. In Oregon, where there are more logging projects on public land (National Forests and BLM lands), treesitting is usually not trespassing but treesitters can be fined for violating closure orders or camping limits, or for erecting illegal structures. Julia Butterfly Hill, an activist in Humboldt County, California, is perhaps the most famous tree-sitter. She became known for her 738 day sit (from December 10, 1997 until December 18, 1999) in a 180-foot, 600-year-old Coast Redwood tree, which she named Luna. Eventually, Hill and other activists raised money and paid Pacific Lumber $50,000 to spare her tree and a 200-foot buffer around it, something which some activists considered an unacceptable compromise. Activists from Greenpeace and the Australian environmental organisation The Wilderness Society hold the record for the world's highest tree-sit, in the Styx Valley, Tasmania. In 2002, two US environmental activists involved in tree-sitting protests died in separate accidents. http://www.portlandtribune.com/archview.cgi?id=18908 http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/archive/2002/October/11/local/stories/01local.htm Some elected officials, lumber companies, and advocates of property rights claim tree sitting is a form of eco-terrorism or ecotage. Compare with: tree spiking

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