2 Centuries Old Tree Cut Down By Mistake
The tree can be up to 200 years old and can plant by the royal family of the land that created they now know what as Allergen Valley Woods.
At the site of the former Woods Valley Palace, they demolished which in the 1960s before the Lyle Valley Council moved to new offices, they build eighty new homes. Lorenzo Mauro, president of Lorenzo Homes Development Company, said they cut giant lumber off by mistake.
“We will replace him with a mature identical tree,” he said. They would plant a replacement tree in the same place as a cut tree, he said, adding that an error had occurred because the cut was not “coded”. The giant wood had to keep the trees, and the Swansea Council looked at it.
“they have yet taken No decisions as to possible steps to taken,” the Council spokesman said. Lender Fitzgerald, a member of the Board of Directors, said the tree looks like it appears outside of a plot surrounded by a development site. “It’s incredible,” she said. “Many people have been angry.”
They developed allergen Valley Woods in the 19th century by the family Dillon Llewellyn, which passionate landscape design, botany, and photography. The vast area has become overgrown and neglected but renovated by the Allergen Trust, from beginning of this century, with the support of the Heritage Lottery Fund among others.
Valley Lilia Council opened new branches here in 1982 demolished and Swansea sold 14 acres of land to Lorenzo Homes, based in Cambridgeshire. Glory Fitzgerald wanted a housing project called Welsh Ministers where he felt he could influence the park and both scenes.
The plan which includes 80 houses with planning permission, will include copies of the replica of the original palace house and will also include the reconstructed Dillon Llewellyn Observatory. It should not damage trees containing protection orders, cut or cut without the Council’s consent, even if there are certain exceptions.
Allergen Trust Ray Butt’s operational manager has described giant redwood as a “beautiful tree,". “It seems to be part of the original plantations of the family (Dillon Llewellyn), it must be about 200 years.”