Sycamore Gap tree trunk installed at The Sill

BBC News, North East and Cumbria
Northumberland National ParkPart of the world -famous plane tree tree, which fell illegally two years ago, is to go to the permanent screen.
In September 2023, the law led to global condemnation and anger, and the two men were found guilty of chopping the tree earlier this year.
Now, people will be able to see and touch a part of the body in a Northumberland visitor center where the tree stops, as a permanent monument of the mindless destruction is opened.
BBC was to see what the screen looked – and got an idea of how it was created.
An idea is shaped in a workshop in a small village in Kumbria.
A big track is the place where artist Charlie Whinney created abstract and beautiful sculptures.
Usually when I visit, they have steam bent wood that squeezes my mind with their twist and turns.
Wherever I look at his curved creations and the signature style will now surround the Symamore GAP body.

The 6FT (2M) piece of tree came to Charlie’s workshop three weeks before the Hadrian’s wall in the Sill National Landscape Discovery Center near the wall in Northumberland.
The luggage was preparing for the metal work that would keep it upright, and the plane tree was the only change in the plane tree itself.
This is a frustrating work, he says to me, “Because many people do not want to care about it, to destroy it.”

The artists are cut smoothly and say, “Working is really nice.”
He’s not an emotional person, but he says, “How much Huggable is flying because he’s flying,” he says, before I invite me to wrap my arms around the trunk – of course.
This is what anyone visiting the installation can do.
PA Media“The real design came from what people say, Char says Charlie. “They wanted to sit, so we made some benches, and almost 100% of the people we talked about said that they wanted to reach the tree and touch it.”
A people participated with children to find out what to do with the workshops and the written contributions of people.
The very popular tree was a part of many unforgettable moments for many people from marriage proposals to the scattering of ashes.

Three benches with canopy of curved wooden stems and leaves are now surrounding the body, and the seats are written in words taken from people’s applications.
Northumberland National Park Authority (NNPA) received thousands of e -mails, letters and messages in visitor books from people talking about the tree and each was read by staff.
The authority assigned Charlie and Creative Community Art Collective to provide an artistic response with Wood, a community interest company that forms sustainable art projects.
“At the beginning, it was very important when we took the commission to represent people who love the tree or recognize the tree in life,” Nick Greenall from Collective, “he says.
He continued: “It shows what it means for people in your absence.”

Rosie Thomas, the Business Development Director of the park, helped to select some of the messages in the installation.
“The chosen words take you to the feelings of sadness, grief, first reaction, hope and wish for the future,” he says.
“A really good thing about words is that everyone’s tree experience is different and everyone’s experience of this installation will be different, because the route you receive to read the words creates your own individual poetry.”
The luggage and the benches were hidden behind the curtains, while mounted on the threshold just two miles from the tree.

For Tony Gates, General Manager of NNPA, it will be a great moment to announce the installation to the public on Thursday morning.
18 months since the tree falls, he says it’s hard for everyone.
“In September 2023, people felt that they lost the tree forever, and perhaps in some respects they felt that they lost these memories of these life events.”
“Today, sitting here to be a part of that tree with this beautiful installation gives me a light of hope for the future, it is time for us to do positive things for this time and nature.”
Both Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers from Kumbria will be sentenced after July 15 There is guilty of cutting the tree.





