We just wanted to say how much we appreciate everyone taking the time to engage in this thread. We’d like to make a couple of other comments. Since the tree cutting became such an issue, we’d like to point out that; older mature trees around here almost always have about a dozen small stunted baby trees, under the rain shadow of the older tree. As soon as we cut and remove the older tree, the ”babies” begin to receive full sunlight, full moisture, and nutrients from the soil. No longer needing to compete with the old tree, they exhibit explosive growth. Now, we admit that it takes 20 to 30 years for those new trees to become harvestable, but lot 1 had nearly a thousand trees on it, and during the last 50 years we have cut about 50, leaving a dozen new young trees for each one cut. There are more trees on lot 1, than when we started. That does not translate into us “stealing or destroying their land”. We process the remaining limbs and slash into “bio-char” and spread it on the land. If you are not familiar, please look it up, and check the term “terra preta”. You will learn that it enhances the soil and sequesters carbon in to the soil for up to a thousand years. The bottom line is that we cut trees on our own land, and treat it the same way, with love and respect. We live close to the land, and deep down, we really view ourselves not as owners, but as being owned by the land, and having a responsibility to be good partners. Alternatively, the absentee owner probably spent the last 50 years behind a desk, with a calculator, scheming on how much profit they would make, when they sold their “investment property”.