The Developer Who Cut My Cedars Learned County Code Had Teeth-Quieen - Chainityai

The Developer Who Cut My Cedars Learned County Code Had Teeth-Quieen

The first time a developer cut my trees, I let it go because I did not know any better.

That is the part I hate admitting.

I had bought the house for the backyard, not for the kitchen, not for the driveway, not even for the quiet street that curved behind a strip of evergreens.

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The backyard was a private room made out of living things.

Douglas firs and western red cedars ran along the property line in a thick, green wall, high enough to swallow the view of the next house and deep enough to turn afternoon light into moving patches on the grass.

When the wind came through, the whole line breathed.

I could stand on the back porch with coffee in my hand and hear branches rubbing together instead of engines, voices, or garage doors.

It felt like a little piece of forest had agreed to belong to me.

About a year after I moved in, I came home for lunch and found almost half of it gone.

The air smelled like sawdust.

Heavy tires had carved deep ruts through the dirt.

The stumps were fresh and pale, and the sudden open sky made the yard feel exposed, like someone had removed a wall from my house while I was at work.

A developer had bought the lot next door.

He had plans for neat townhomes, straight fences, clean driveways, and a version of the neighborhood where old trees were nothing but things in the way.

He showed me a survey and told me the trees he removed had been fully on his side.

I was young enough to believe a man holding paperwork must know what he was talking about.

I was new enough to think being neighborly meant swallowing anger so no one could call me difficult.

So I let it go.

That decision sat in me for four years.

By the time I learned Washington gives only a limited window to pursue timber trespass, that window had closed.

The stumps stayed.

The gap stayed.

The lesson stayed longest of all.

So when I came home for lunch years later and heard chainsaws again, something in me went still.

Not calm.

Still.

There is a difference.

Calm is peace.

Still is a door locking inside you.

I walked through the side gate and saw men working along the same property line, branches dropping into my yard, sawdust flying across my grass, another piece of the living wall coming down.

This time I had the survey.

I had studied it.

I knew where the line ran.

The trees they were cutting were not fully theirs.

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