Tree spiking

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Tree spiking is a form of sabotage which involves hammering a metal rod or other material (commonly ceramic) into a tree trunk in order to discourage logging. Activists do this in order to devalue the commercial use of the wood, turning the logger activity economically inviable in the long run, while not threatening the life of the tree. The presence of the spike creates a mantrap which may injure lumberjacks who attempt to cut down the tree. One such incident[citation needed] led many activists to either reject this form of sabotage entirely, or take some precautions, such as putting warning signs in the area where the trees are being spiked. Tree spiking is condemned by opponents as eco-terrorism as they claim it is potentially dangerous to loggers or mill-workers,[1] although only one injury resulting from tree spiking has been widely reported.[2]

It is believed that tree spiking originated in timber logging labor disputes in the Pacific Northwest of the United States in the late 1800s[citation needed]. It came to prominence as a contentious tactic within unconventional environmentalist circles during the 1980s, after it was advocated by Earth First! co-founder Dave Foreman in his book Ecodefense. In the book, he discusses how to do it and how to avoid risks to the activist and the logger.

[edit] New Zealand

Beech trees that were being logged in 1998 in the Tuatapere area were spiked. Police were unable to trace those who were responsible.[3]

Pat O'Dea, while he was the mayor for the Buller District, suggested in 2000 that Native Forest Action (NFA) had spiked trees during a direct action campaign against native forest logging on the West Coast.[4] This was denied by NFA spokesperson Dean Bagient-Mercer.[5] In 1998 Kevin Smith from Forest and Bird had said that tree spiking was proposed by some individuals involved in the NFA campaign.[3]

[edit] United States

In 1987, California mill worker George Alexander was seriously injured when the bandsaw he was operating was shattered by either an old nail or a tree spike.

Tree spiking was declared a federal felony in the United States in 1988. (18 U.S. Code 1864).

In 1990, Earth First! leader Judi Bari led activists in Northern California and Southern Oregon to renounce tree-spiking as a tactic on the eve of Redwood Summer, a 1990 campaign of nonviolent protests against logging of the redwood forest.[6]

[edit] Tree spiking in fiction

Derek Hansen in his 1998 novel Blockade has the protagonist, a logging company operator, ordering the spiking of trees in order to discredit the anti-logging activists.

Severed (2005 film): Anti-logging activists sabotage a tree by spiking it, breaking the blade on a logger’s chainsaw and cutting him. The genetically enhanced tree sap mixes with the logger’s blood, starting a chain reaction of zombie mayhem.

"Darkness Falls" (The X-Files): Two environmentalist "monkey wrenchers" are accused of spiking trees in a Washington state forest.

The Anarchist Cookbook: In this film the antagonist Johnny Black plans on spiking redwood trees in an attempt to prevent logging.

The comic series Concrete, by Paul Chadwick, dedicated a multi-part story called "Think Like a Mountain" to the subject of tree spiking.

A group of radical environmentalists engage in tree-spiking in the novel Hayduke Lives! by Edward Abbey.

In the young adult novel "Spirit of the Rainforest" by Eric Wilson, young protagonist Tom Austen takes part in a protest against logging a rainforest but the protest is broken when a more radical character spikes a tree, angering non violent protesters.

In the 1991 L. A. Law episode "Do the Spike Thing", a mill worker sues a logging company and a radical environmentalist group when he is injured by a saw blade that breaks upon striking a spike.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ecoterrorism: The Dangerous Fringe of the Environmental Movement
  2. ^ Rowell, Andrew (1996) Green Backlash Routledge ISBN 0415128285, 9780415128285 
  3. ^ a b Nixon, Tina (1998-01-06). "Spikes put workers' lives at risk". The Southland Times. 
  4. ^ Madgwick, Paul (2000-04-14). "Public backlash around NZ feared". The Press. 
  5. ^ Bagient-Mercer, Dean (2000-04-27). "West Coast forests". Letter to the Editor (The Press). 
  6. ^ "Tree-spiking renunciation & Mississippi summer in the California redwoods"

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages