Ottawa Citizen

Stranger saves family’s memorial

- LIAM CASEY

An Ottawa family says it is overwhelme­d with gratitude after a stranger saved a roadside memorial to a loved one that was on a tree slated for removal.

That tree, known to the family as “Stef’s tree,” bore a memorial on its trunk to Stefan Trynda, a 19-year-old man who died after crashing into it in 2001.

After standing along a road in Ottawa’s south end for years, the ash tree recently fell victim to the destructiv­e emerald ash borer beetle and died.

A few weeks ago the City of Ottawa dispatched Blake Murray and his crew to cut down trees in the south end, “Stef ’s tree” among them.

When Murray arrived, he saw one of the trees had a white cross nailed to it. He knew it was important, he said, but not to whom.

“We figured we’d better save it,” Murray said in an interview.

So Murray and his team cut down only the top portion of the tree, above the white cross. One of his coworkers then suggested adding to the memorial, so Murray used his chainsaw to carve a second cross onto the top of the tree trunk.

“It felt nice to do something nice,” Murray said.

News of his good deed spread on Facebook, eventually reaching Trynda’s sister.

“It is beautiful,” an emotional Anne-Marie TryndaGrea­ney said of Murray’s gesture.

“It’s such a kind thing to do. You don’t often hear about kindness like that. You only really hear about the horrible things these days.”

Trynda had been about 10 minutes away from home in February 2001 when he hit black ice, lost control of his car and hit the tree which nearly got cut down entirely, his sister said.

“That tree has become a memorial for my family and friends,” she said. “At the time there were flowers and all sorts of things there, but over time that is gone and just a cross remains.”

Trynda’s parents find it too difficult to speak about their son publicly, and continue to struggle with their loss, Trynda-Greaney said. But they have been overwhelme­d by Murray’s gesture, she said.

“Losing their boy pains them every single day, but they drive by that tree almost daily and will sometimes visit it,” she said. “Even though we’d never forget Stef, it’s nice to know the tree still stands, like it won’t forget him.”

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Blake Murray, who was dispatched to take down some dead trees in Ottawa, carved a cross in one of them with his chainsaw when he saw it was a memorial.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Blake Murray, who was dispatched to take down some dead trees in Ottawa, carved a cross in one of them with his chainsaw when he saw it was a memorial.

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