Because every town needs a park, a library and a newspaper
Carbondale’s weekly
community connector
Volume 10, Number 20 | June 21, 2018
Pat Hunter, on whose property the tree existed for more than a century, poses on top of the fallen trunk with Aspen Tree Service staff Michael Fisher (center) and Don Nalley (top right). In front, Charley Wagner (left) stands with Charlie Trujillo. Photo by Megan Tackett
Luckily, no one was there when the tree fell (but it made a loud noise in several lives) By Megan Tackett Sopris Sun Staff
Doni Nicoll was all set for his and his family’s next chapter. They’re already renting a new home in Arizona, where his wife and daughter have relocated. Their Satank property had a buyer and was set to close Friday, June 15. It had been professionally cleaned and awaiting its final walk-through, scheduled for Thursday afternoon at 1:30. “It was so pretty, we almost felt like not selling it,” Nicoll said with a chuckle. Meanwhile, a little before 1:30, Sarah Murray — the re-
altor managing the sale — received a call a from those buyers. They were still finishing their lunch at Silo and running about 10 minutes late. In hindsight, everyone involved is grateful for that delay. At almost exactly 1:30 p.m. that Thursday, what was purportedly Garfield County’s oldest cottonwood tree fell in the afternoon’s high winds — and crashed right through the roof above the kitchen island of the newly cleaned, readyto-close house. TREE page 3
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