DAY 7


DAY 7
04.11.07
TREE 8

I had a great day at Cherokee Park today. I parked by Dog Hill and waited for a pause in the thunderstorm. When it did, I picked a huge, leafless tree in a large grassy field. I had to be particularly careful since the branches were wet and slippery. I didn’t get too high because of that. I then walked around the park to look for good spots for my wedding. I found some interesting possibilities. Then I drove to Big Rock and by this point it was sunny and warm. The creek was rushing from the storm so I stepped out on the rocks to watch the trash flow by. Then I went to The Big Rock and got as low to the water as I could. In a few minutes the water level rose and I had to get up higher. When I went back to the stones I had been on 10 minutes prior, they were underneath water.

4-11-08: Later that day I drove through hail to H&R Block to sign my taxes. My mom works there and had just called to inform me they were completed. I was lucky it didn’t start hailing when I was out on the rocks.


Yesterday I took Will’s advice and made some time lapse videos. I just went out to the front yard of my parents’ house and made one of me climbing up one little tree, and coming down another.


Then I made another video of a three tree transfer.  I had shot it once but the angle of the camera didn’t catch the action up high so I repositioned it and did it again.  Those moments on the middle tree were very scary because my muscles had gotten so tired.  And I was amazed I did it.  Thanks to that guy’s video of small tree transfers I was able to do it myself.  It’s like when nobody thought a sub 4 minute mile was possible until Roger Bannister did it.  Then 46 days later someone else did it, and now the record is around 3:41.


Sorry it’s sideways, I need to get a conversion program to make my .MOV files into .AVI to edit them. Any suggestions?

If this is your first visit to my blog, welcome, and please view my introduction. Thanks.

TS

6 Replies to “DAY 7”

  1. hey wow!

    That’s quite a coincidence considering all the trees in this city. However, I have climbed a lot of trees, especially in Cherokee Park.

    Part of me wonders if maybe I should have left those ribbons up there for people to find and try to figure out how they got up there. But then the other part of me is glad I took them down. What do you think?

  2. Re: hey wow!

    i think taking the ribbons down is a good idea. you’d have to have something much more outstanding/anomalous to get people to notice, i think.

    hmm. That kind of suggests an interesting project. What could you put in a tree that would incite people to climb it?

  3. Re: hey wow!

    I have definitely thought about that. One idea was a sound piece. Somehow install a speaker up there of a cat meowing, or someone calling for help (though that could turn out really badly). Or, have a tin can telephone line from the speaker hanging down to about 4 feet off the ground. People could walk up and put their ear to it and hear whatever is coming out of that speaker, like “I pity the foo who don’t climb this tree!”

    I don’t know… as for objects… um money? Like something very visible: a big jar of coins? Hmmm, what motivates people? Build a little tree fort that says no people allowed. And that would draw the curious, but, well, keep out the followers of rules. A CLOWN! Animatronic Abe Lincoln! CAKE! A TRAMPOLINE!

  4. Question

    Todd,

    Could I use your photographs of the trees to make some drawings?

    Thanks, great project

    DeWitt

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