Cedar Ridge Estates had been built about five years ago on the ridge above my land—big homes, polished lawns, expensive views. But my property wasn’t part of their development. It had been here long before them.
A business card had been left under my windshield.
Evergreen Land & Tree Services.
I called immediately.
The man on the phone sounded casual at first, until I explained what had happened. Then his tone shifted.
He said the HOA had authorized clearing for a “view corridor.”
View corridor.
Like my trees were an inconvenience on a map.
I told him clearly: the land was mine, always had been. The trees were mine. He hesitated, then suggested I contact the HOA.
I hung up and stood among the stumps.
Each one was a cross-section of time. Rings you could count—forty years, maybe more. Years of growth, seasons, storms, sunlight.
I remembered my father teaching me how to plant them. How to dig, how to water, how to care for something that would outlast you.
Now they were gone.
“They did it for the view,” Hannah said.
She was right.
From the ridge, my trees had blocked the sunset. Now, without them, the view stretched wide and uninterrupted.
I got back in my car.
I wasn’t shouting. I wasn’t shaking.
The anger was there—but cold, focused.
I drove up to Cedar Ridge.
The entrance was exactly what you’d expect—stone signage, neat landscaping, houses with walls of glass facing west.
I found the HOA president’s house easily.
Richard Coleman.
He opened the door dressed for golf, looking mildly annoyed.
“Yes?”
“Your contractors cut down six trees on my property this morning,” I said.
He didn’t seem surprised.
“We cleared the view corridor,” he replied.
“They were on my land.”
“Our survey says otherwise.”
“It’s wrong.”
He smiled slightly, the kind of practiced smile that dismisses without arguing.
“Then you should get your own survey.”
I glanced past him—through the glass walls, straight across my land, where the trees had once stood.
“You mean your view,” I said.
He didn’t deny it.
“You don’t live up here,” he added.
I looked at him for a moment.
“You’re right,” I said. “I don’t.”
Then I left.
Back home, I went straight to the cabinet in the hallway.
The file was exactly where it had always been.
The easement agreement.
Maple Ridge Road, the only paved road into Cedar Ridge, crossed my land. My grandfather had allowed it decades ago—but as an easement, not a sale.
That distinction mattered.