On a historic Santa Rosa street, neighbors have been watching a redwood tree grow like a living monument over years, decades, lifetimes. They’ve seen the slow-motion work as its roots muscled large chunks of concrete sidewalk up from horizontal placings into a nearly vertical, catawampus mess.
The sidewalk is impassable and has been for years. This spring, the city issued the property owner a permit to cut down the tree and restore the sidewalk. It’s the cleanest solution, but one that spurred a passionate neighborhood campaign to save the towering redwood tree with a 4-foot-wide trunk that they now call Rosie.
“This is the life of a 70-foot beautiful tree versus 30 feet of concrete,” said Tom Murphy, a neighborhood leader in the effort to save the tree…