
The park ranger who alerted world to Sycamore Gap tree's fate
Park ranger Gary Pickles was in shock.Where once had stood arguably England's favourite tree, there was now just air.When the call had come through earlier that morning, Gary had thought it was a prank.His working day on 28 September 2023 had barely started when a farmer called his office to report the tree was down."I doubted a farmer would be telling us a silly story so I thought 'oh my god, I think this might be true'."
The team of park rangers were alerted by email and Gary got in his van to drive to the tree.With every passing minute of the short journey, his anxiety levels increased."As I got nearer and nearer, I just thought 'it's gone, it's gone'."He'd arrived at the road adjacent to the tree and had to "double take" as he saw it for the first time lying on its side."It was shock," said Gary, who was met with a gaping hole in the landscape. At this stage, he presumed the tree had been damaged in Storm Agnes, which had brought strong winds overnight."When you look and it's gone, it's just....oh my god," he said."It's a landmark. It's a piece of the landscape."Gary needed to investigate further. He parked his van in a nearby car park and rushed on foot to the fallen tree.
The sadness he was feeling soon turned to anger and panic."When I got there I realised it had been chopped down and not blown down."There was a clean cut so that escalated it up."Once you realise it's been chopped down, then it's going to become a massive worldwide story."The seriousness of the developing situation quickly became apparent.Gary hastily reported back to Northumberland National Park's headquarters that it appeared that the tree had been cut down deliberately. At this stage there was no time to consider who by or why.
Just after 09:00 BST, the National Park alerted colleagues at the National Trust, including general manager Andrew Poad."My personal phone started lighting up. Messages were coming through on my laptop."Once I realised it was a deliberate act, crisis mode kicked in," said Andrew, whose priority was to personally inform people before they saw it on social media."It was like ringing people up to tell them that someone had passed away."On the day I was using the expression 'it's like losing a loved one'. We all went through that grief."There were numerous members of staff in tears."Viral photographs shared on social media showed the tree on its side, as the PR teams at the National Park and the National Trust frantically collaborated on an official response."Within the hour it was global, effectively," Andrew said.
Shortly before 11:00, a statement from the organisations confirmed the tree had been cut down. At around midday, Northumbria Police announced it was being treated as "a deliberate act of vandalism".Local journalists were already carrying out interviews at the scene, before reporters from around the world turned the grassy mound opposite the stump into a "sea of camera tripods"."It is the largest press story that the National Trust has ever dealt with," Andrew said."It was one of the things that surprised us. The sheer scale of the global reach of the interest really took us back a bit."The usual calming sound of the vast countryside was drowned out by the clicks of cameras and the engines of broadcast trucks."We knew it was popular, but we didn't know how popular," Andrew said.
The international interest also surprised Gary."My sister lives in France, my brother is in America, and by dinner time they'd both rung me, so it was global news at such a fast rate."Senior management from the National Park and the National Trust spent the afternoon at the fallen tree, speaking to the crowds of emotional walkers and journalists.Reporters gathered shocking footage of the trunk draped over a now damaged Hadrian's Wall. This idyllic, tranquil spot that had brought peace to so many was now a crime scene wrapped in blue and white police tape. Forensic officers in white suits also gathered DNA from the stump.Eighteen months on from its felling, Andrew and Gary regularly reflect on the day that north-east England lost "a massive local landmark.""It's just senseless. Who or what were they trying to get at?" said Andrew."It's still a huge part of my life dealing with this. It's a big gap in all our lives, never mind the landscape."
The jury in the trial of the pair accused of cutting down the tree - Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers - found both guilty.
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