and left his bicycle chained to a tree. ...
If the fork in a tree growing up under a bike, split to each side, it would lift the bike as it grew. A fence nailed to the OUTSIDE of a tree is not the same. Think about a small tree, maybe only a foot tall. Branches reach out but only a few inches off the ground, yet in later years those same branches are now many feet off the ground and much larger. That bike, how ever it got there, wasn't put into the tree. The tree grew around it. That said, a kid could have tossed his bike into the lowest fork he could reach, leaving it, and the tree would grow around it. But it would still rise as the tree grew.
Carl. < not actually an Arborist....
But...an arborist would agree!If the fork in a tree growing up under a bike, split to each side, it would lift the bike as it grew. A fence nailed to the OUTSIDE of a tree is not the same. Think about a small tree, maybe only a foot tall. Branches reach out but only a few inches off the ground, yet in later years those same branches are now many feet off the ground and much larger. That bike, how ever it got there, wasn't put into the tree. The tree grew around it. That said, a kid could have tossed his bike into the lowest fork he could reach, leaving it, and the tree would grow around it. But it would still rise as the tree grew.
Carl. < not actually an Arborist....
and left his bicycle chained to a tree. ...
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