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ANAHEIM ?EUR??,,????'??? A 57-year-old Anaheim Hills man climbed a ficus tree on January 10 and refused to come down after city crews arrived with cutting tools and a wood chipper. Two hours later, after city crews left, Gene Secrest’s climbed out of the tree By Thursday morning, Secrest and a neighbor were taking turns standing guard at the base of the tree. If crews return, Secrest said, he will scurry back up into the tree, where he has hung a hammock and halogen lights. City Fire Marshall Jeff Lutz said the tree “is on city property and creates an obstruction to fire apparatus.” “We require a minimum fire access of 20 feet wide and 14 feet high (on streets),” Lutz said. “This tree is growing out into the street at a height of less than 14 feet.” Secrest said he received a call from Allen Hudak of the city’s Urban Forestry Department on Wednesday, informing him of the city’s wish to cut down the tree. Secrest says the city of Anaheim required him to plant the tree in 1979. “I put the road in,” he said Wednesday, from a perch high atop the large ficus. “At that time the city required that I plant these trees.” When a city crew showed up with a wood chipper in tow, Secrest told them, “I planted this tree myself. I’m going to go up and say goodbye to it now.” “I’ll sleep out here if necessary,” Secrest said. Source: The Orange County Register
ANAHEIM ?EUR??,,????'??? A 57-year-old Anaheim Hills man climbed a ficus tree on January 10 and refused to come down after city crews arrived with cutting tools and a wood chipper.
Two hours later, after city crews left, Gene Secrest’s climbed out of the tree
By Thursday morning, Secrest and a neighbor were taking turns standing guard at the base of the tree. If crews return, Secrest said, he will scurry back up into the tree, where he has hung a hammock and halogen lights.
City Fire Marshall Jeff Lutz said the tree “is on city property and creates an obstruction to fire apparatus.”
“We require a minimum fire access of 20 feet wide and 14 feet high (on streets),” Lutz said. “This tree is growing out into the street at a height of less than 14 feet.”
Secrest said he received a call from Allen Hudak of the city’s Urban Forestry Department on Wednesday, informing him of the city’s wish to cut down the tree.
Secrest says the city of Anaheim required him to plant the tree in 1979.
“I put the road in,” he said Wednesday, from a perch high atop the large ficus. “At that time the city required that I plant these trees.”
When a city crew showed up with a wood chipper in tow, Secrest told them, “I planted this tree myself. I’m going to go up and say goodbye to it now.”
“I’ll sleep out here if necessary,” Secrest said.
Source: The Orange County Register
Francisco Uviña, University of New Mexico
Hardscape Oasis in Litchfield Park
Ash Nochian, Ph.D. Landscape Architect
November 12th, 2025
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