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Tom Tangney
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Is the mountain the view, or is the tree that is blocking it out your window the real treasure? (AP Photo/File)

A view can be of the tree that is actually blocking your 'view'

A view is a view is a view.

First off, I must admit it's amusing to see a couple of extremely wealthy families squaring off, battling over who deserves a better view of the Olympics from their multi-million dollar homes.

Former Mariner John Olerud will soon have an "improved view" from his Clyde Hill home, but he's going to pay for it.

Olerud's neighbors have two 50 foot trees obstructing his home's view, and the city has ordered them removed at his expense.

The ruling is the first of its kind since 1991 under the view obstruction and tree removal ordinance. The Seattle Times reports those trees will then be replaced, and Olerud's neighbors will have to keep them trimmed to no higher than 25 feet.

But the fact that Olerud and his neighbors tried to out-Christian the other is also curious to me. During a Clyde Hill city hearing, the Oleruds quoted Jesus as saying 'You should love your neighbors' as a reason for why those neighbors, the Bakers, should cut down their tree for them. As it so happens, Mr. Baker is a Presbyterian minister. In one of Baker's counteroffers, he would have had the Oleruds "tithe" $25,000 to a charity.

Putting all that extraneous stuff aside, I've got to say I think the Bakers got screwed - but I'm not here to re-litigate the case.

By the way, I have nothing against John Olerud. He was always one of my favorite Mariners. In a world full of trash-talkers, he was that rare "gentlemen" in pro sports. A great role model.

What does bother me is how short-sighted the Oleruds are. I know this is a minority view, but I think there's more to a view than just the mountains, or Lake Washington, or the Seattle skyline.

The Bakers' rare, 50-foot Chinese pine is ALSO the view. Why not appreciate that view instead of impose your own pre-concieved ideas of what a view should be on somebody else?

This issue happens to hit close to home for me, despite the fact that my salary would be little more than chump change to either the Oleruds or the Bakers.

We have a ramshackle cabin up on Whidbey Island that's shared by a bunch of related families and we have a tree that blocks our view of Mt. Baker. Some in the family want to cut it down to clear out a view of the mountain but others - led by me - argue vociferously that tree is every bit as good as Mt. Baker. They can't see the tree for the metaphoric "forest" of a view.

In my personal family battle, I've given framed photos of the obstructing tree as Christmas presents and turned them into a jigsaw puzzle for visitors to the cabin. It's now the best-known tree on our property! Everybody else has a view of Mt. Baker but no one else has our tree!

With apologies to Joyce Kilmer, I think that I shall never see a view as lovely as that tree.

Tom Tangney, KIRO Radio Host
Tom Tangney is co-host of KIRO Radio's Seattle's Morning News and resident enthusiast of...everything. He loves books, movies, TV, art, pop culture, politic, sports, and Husky football.

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Comments (18)


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  • doubleogordo wrote...
    Why John Why?
    I was a big John Olerud fan when he was with the Blue Jays and the Mariners. I was afer all a left handed baseball player myself. But now, he represents everything that has gone wrong with this region. He is now a rich jerk living in Clyde Hill taking people to court over trees that were there when he bought the house. What a loser. I have to wonder, did his wife put him up to this?
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  • Nickatnyt wrote...
    I wish Olerud was my neighbor.
    I paid $1,600 to have a 90 foot pine taken down but if John were my neighbor it would have been free. Oh well.
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  • dori monson fan wrote...
    I have a cousin from the midwest who visits seattle occasionally
    and he has always maintained that the mountains block the view.
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  • deltta wrote...
    I thought non-native
    Plants and trees were bad?
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  • Checkmate wrote...
    The Bakers' rare, 50-foot Chinese pine
    If the bakers planted those trees the the Oleruds in fairness should have paid the 25,000 dollar "tithe", or atleast negotiated a fair valued "tithe" both partys could live with.
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  • uralnutjobs wrote...
    rare trees dont belong in the fires place
    cant say that a imported tree is the view since it is an artificial view. if the bakers are fine with the exchange then i see nothing wrong here. in fact this might be a good thing with all the problems with invasive species coming to our shores
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  • hpygolkyone wrote...
    I'm In The Wrong Business..............
    When a Presbyterian Minister is the neighbor to a millionaire baseball player.....something seems a little out of kilter?

    Maybe he inherited the bucks to live in the run down community of Clyde Hill. It does make me wonder?

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  • Chris Halliday wrote...
    hpygolkyone, I got a documentary suggestion you might like
    I find it interesting that a minister of any kind lives in an upscale neighborhood as well. You may want to watch Bill Maher's documentary, "Religulous". Bill challenges a few preachers to justify their wealth. It's amusing to watch them blatantly try to lie about why it's ok for them to be filthy rich. Even if this cracker did inherit a fortune his opulent lifestyle isn't something his so-called "Lord and Savior" would aprove of I'm quite sure.
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  • 1999thelastgoodyear wrote...
    So easy to judge...
    I love how people love to judge anyone in the ministry for making too much money. How is it ANY of your business how much someone makes? If his church chooses to pay him a salary that allows him to live in that neighborhood, good for him! Both the rich and the poor are welcome to follow Jesus.
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  • YouGotNothin wrote...
    typical chris-chun
    We all judge, numnuts........just like you are judging people on this blog, for judging him.

    I'm going to judge you as I think you must be one of those "chris-chuns" that talk about how wonderful you are and how GEEZUZ is the light and the happiness and yet will stab anyone and everyone in the back to get whatever it is that benefits them?

    I have met hundreds of your type and have only met a handful that I would give the time of day. Everyone else has turned out to be a liar and a thief and a cheat. What a dildo

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  • Clearwater3 wrote...
    Hear, hear...
    I could not agree more...
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  • soo purletiv wrote...
    Thank you Mr. Olerud
    I can look in any direction and see trees. The same is not so true for pristine mountains, especially if 2, not hundreds, but 2 trees are blocking them.

    The Baker's are phony. The law is clear, yet they chose to ignore it as well as the requests from the Olerud's leading up to the city making a decision for them.

    Soon the beautiful sound of "TIMBER", will fill the quiet crisp air of Clyde Hill, and then the view will be back to where it should be.

    Ahhhhhh! The majestic view of the Olympic Mountains. Don't you just love it?

    Chop Chop...

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  • 1999thelastgoodyear wrote...
    View = $$$$
    Look, I get it. Having or not having a view can seriously effect the value of your home, so I can understand why someone might be upset if their neighbor plants landscaping that obscures the view. Yes, a view of trees is a view, but that view might not be worth as much to a home buyer as a view of the mountains. I personally would not plant trees that obscure my neighbors' view. It's just not very thoughtful.
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