Crews began the delicate process of cutting the 270-year-old tree into
nine different sections Wednesday morning, removing large branches by
crane as residents looked on.
Some 70,000 pine trees dotted Rikuzentakata's waterfront before the
tsunami hit in March last year, but only one survived the destructive
waves. Residents called the 89-foot tree a "miracle," but the saltwater
that seeped into the roots proved to be too much.
Crews plan to hollow out the tree trunk now, and insert a carbon spine
inside after treating the wood. They will replace the original branches
with plastic replicas, before returning the pine to its original place
next February, just shy of the second anniversary of the disaster.
"This tree has had such a big role," Mayor Futoshi Toba told reporters.
"Reconstruction is just beginning, and the process is a long one. This
is just a temporary move."
The entire process is estimated to cost 150 million yen ($27 million), a
hefty price tag considering the larger reconstruction projects the city
is already tasked with. A Facebook page was launched in July, to raise
money for the preservation project, and city officials said they have
collected more than $330,000 so far.
Nearly 20,000 people died when the tsunami hit the Tohoku region in
northeast Japan 18 months ago. Hundreds of thousands of people remain
displaced by the disaster
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