She Cut My Trees For A Lake View, Then The Survey Plat Spoke-Neyney - Chainityai

She Cut My Trees For A Lake View, Then The Survey Plat Spoke-Neyney

The stumps were still wet when I got home.

Not damp from rain.

Wet from the living tissue of eighteen trees that had been cut down while I was away.

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The July heat had already settled over the Webb Ranch, but the sawdust along my north fence line still looked fresh and pale.

I knew what that meant.

The crew had not been gone long.

For twenty-two years, those Arizona cypress trees had made a green wall between my four acres and Cedar View Shores.

I planted them in 2002, when the land was still dry Texas clay, survey stakes, and stubborn hope.

I watered them before breakfast.

I staked them through their first storms.

I watched them grow from thin little whips into a solid line of shade, privacy, and work.

Now there was open sky where the trees had stood.

There was also a straight view into Diane Holst’s living room window.

And from Diane’s living room window, there was finally a straight view of the lake.

The yellow envelope on the fence post carried the Cedar View Shores HOA logo.

Inside was a notice signed by Diane, the board chair.

It said my trees were an immediate fire hazard under an emergency enforcement clause.

It offered a small reimbursement if I signed a form saying the matter was resolved.

Someone had handwritten, “Hope this resolves things, Marcus.”

I folded the letter, put it in my pocket, and went for my camera.

Not my phone.

My DSLR stored raw files with GPS coordinates and timestamps, and I wanted every stump to speak in a language a court would understand.

I photographed the cuts from four sides.

I photographed the resin, the sawdust pattern, the chainsaw angles, and the boot prints in the damp soil near stump twelve.

By noon, I had more than two hundred photographs.

By midafternoon, I had Tom Briggs, a certified arborist, walking the line with measuring tools.

Then Gary Tilson arrived from the HOA in a white SUV.

He had a folder in one hand and a prepared tone in his voice.

He talked about Article 7.

He talked about community safety.

He talked about wildfire prevention.

He talked about Diane making a hard decision for the good of the neighborhood.

I let him finish.

Then I asked whether he had a fire hazard assessment signed by a licensed engineer for those specific trees.

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