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Saturday, June 8, 2019

One of Toronto's oldest and largest trees has fallen

A red oak heritage tree that's over 250 years old fell in Etobicoke on Thursday morning.

The tree fell around 2 a.m. The sound was so loud that residents in the area woke up and came outside to see what happened.

“It sounded like a bomb,” David Le Prevost said, the realtor for 4 Old Oak Drive, at Dundas Street West and Wimbleton Road, which was the property the tree was located.

The tree was almost 37 metres tall and the circumference was almost 5 meters.

“If it landed on a house, it would have killed someone,” Le Prevost said.

The tree fell because it was rotting from within.

“I regret to hear a majestic tree such as this one has come down,” Stephen Holyday, the central Etobicoke city councillor, said. “It’s a loss to the community.”

The area is known for its massive old trees. “The trees help define us,” Holyday added. There are only a handful of heritage trees remaining in Etobicoke.

tree toronto

One of Toronto's oldest trees fell in Toronto this week. Photo by David Leprevost.

Old Oak Drive is named after the red oak tree, which started growing in 1770, almost 100 years before the confederation of Canada.

In 1870, the area became a lumber market, but this tree was saved from the sawmill because it was located beside Long Branch Park.

The property of Old Oak Drive is vacant at the moment and the landowners are planning to knock down the property.


by Hannah Alberga via blogTO

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