ROTHENBURGER: Planting a memorial tree shouldn’t be nearly this difficult
THE NARROW STREET that winds through 1950 Braeview Place is lined with trees and bushes. In front of each townhouse, a Saskatoon, hawthorn, cedar or red crabapple lends shade and colour.
But not at Don Stocks’ unit. There, a few marigolds grow where a young hawthorn was removed a couple of weeks ago on orders from the strata council.
There’s quite a story to that tree, which now stands in a pot on his front step.
Don’s wife, Nora, was a community pillar in Kamloops for many years. As Kamloops entered the 1970s, it was booming, and new municipalities were springing up everywhere. One of them was the district of Brocklehurst; when it was incorporated, she was elected to the council.