My Woodlot Transformation
It was the 12th month
of Covid isolation, or the 8th, or maybe some other time designation
related to the virus that had overtaken everyone on earth. There seemed to be
no agreement on when it started, or even where, for sure.
I looked out on our woodlot, an area that encompassed perhaps a third
of our 40 acres, and saw the fallen trees and branches mixed in with the
healthy leafless trees of December. Was it within my physical ability to take
on this woodlot’s cleanup as my new fitness program? Might that be the perfect
way to keep my mind occupied while the world whirled on? Would a project
seemingly larger than myself keep the stresses of Covid, a rabid political
climate in the whole United States, and winter’s usual dark days at bay?
I was a veteran of jogging,
walking, step aerobics, Curves, Snap Fitness and line dancing. Besides the fact
that I felt uninspired by the lack of meaningful products from time spent in
these activities, the virus did not allow much of anything except jogging,
which my hip replacement no longer allowed, and walking which didn’t produce
the effects I wanted.
But as I looked out the window
that day, I saw a long-term project that would show daily accomplishment. I
would be outside in the sunshine. The woods would reflect my time spent and
exhibit piles of branches and tidy stacks of wood. But was I up to it?
I had used a chainsaw only once.
It was a small gas saw with a 12 inch rotating chain blade. I wore a hooded
sweatshirt with a string to cinch the hood. Somehow the motor swallowed the end
of the string and quickly wound it up tight, bringing the rotating blade within
inches of my face. Of course it was my lack of safety knowledge in using such a
tool that made using it dangerous. I don’t recall if the string choked the
motor or if I managed to hit an off switch. I wasn’t hurt but I was a modicum
wiser. I was also fearful of using a chainsaw when others could do it safer and
with more skill. Which I allowed them to do for at least another 25 years.
In 2020, though, there were an
assortment of chainsaws in the family, one of which was lightweight, battery
operated, and made noise only when the trigger was activated. At eight pounds,
the saw wasn’t so heavy as to make it difficult to manipulate yet it could
provide a workout. Perfect.
Other women had also
demonstrated to me that we could handle a chainsaw if the proportions were
right. My daughter Chelsea wielded a small chainsaw with the aplomb of a
woodswoman. Daughter Dawn had her own saw. My friend Sharon was 81 and along
with a similarly aged female friend had used a small chainsaw to clean up a
fallen tree in her yard. Retired teacher Reta had taken on a project of
cleaning up an abandoned 8 acre park and she worked at it summer and winter.
The woods was there and the
chainsaw was within reach. But I was 67 years old, overweight, out of shape,
and full of excuses if I wanted to make them. But I needed a daily workout and
decided this would be it.