Sentinel & Enterprise

Branching out

- By Jerry Zezima

I used to think the high point of grandparen­thood was doing incredibly silly things with my grandchild­ren. Now I realize I am not the top grandfathe­r anymore. That’s because I recently met one who climbs trees for a living.

Rene Funez is a happily married man with four children, four grandchild­ren and nerves of steel. I am a haplessly married man with two children, five grandchild­ren and nerves of aluminum, which is why Rene came over to my house.

He and Mario Osorio were charged — though not, thank goodness, electrical­ly — with removing the top portion of a notso-mighty oak whose limbs, twigs and branches were hanging over power lines in the backyard.

“Rene is 62 years old,” Mario told me after his acrobatic colleague had strapped a pair of spikes to his legs and, with a chainsaw hanging from his belt, scampered like a squirrel up the 50-foot tree. “And,” added Mario, 44, as we watched safely from below, “he calls me an old man.”

“I’m a geezer, too,” I said, noting that I am six years older than Rene, “but I could never do what he does.”

“Why?” Mario asked. “You look like you’re in good shape.”

“That’s because I do 12- ounce curls,” I answered. “But I’m petrified of heights.”

I explained that when my wife, Sue, and I moved into our twostory Colonial 24 years ago, I had to go up on a ladder to clean the gutters.

“I thought I’d end up in the gutter,” I said. “So we got gutter guards.”

Since then, I have remained on terra firma, a Latin phrase meaning, “What you will be buried in if you fall off the roof.”

“Or,” I added, “out of a tree.”

“I have to tell you a secret,” Mario whispered. “I’m afraid of heights, too. That’s why I don’t climb trees.”

“You leave that job to an old guy?” I said incredulou­sly.

“Yes,” Mario admitted. “Rene is a lot braver than I am.”

But they work well as a team. While Rene was making like rockabye boomer on the treetop, literally going out on a limb to prune, cut and saw off potentiall­y dangerous branches that could have fallen on electrical wires and left the entire neighborho­od in the dark, Mario was the boots on the ground, easing the massive woody boughs down with ropes and pulleys.

“Watch out!” Mario warned as one big branch seemed likely to land on my noggin.

Unlike Mario and Rene, I wasn’t wearing a helmet.

“If it had hit me in the head,” I noted, “it would have splintered into a hundred pieces.”

“Your head?” Mario wondered. “No, the branch,” I replied.

“At least you would have had some firewood,” said Mario.

“That would be pretty dangerous,” I noted.

“Why?” Mario inquired. “Because,” I said, “we don’t have a fireplace.”

When Rene had finished, he swooped down like Batman, put down his chainsaw, took off his spikes, looked over at the logs, limbs and branches piled into a corner of the yard, and smiled modestly as I showered him with compliment­s.

“I feel guilty,” I told him.

“How come?” Rene wondered. “I’m a grandfathe­r like you, but I could never do what you do,” I said.

“God watches over me,” Rene said.

“He went to Bible college,” Mario said of his sinewy co-worker.

“When he’s up in a tree, he’s closer to heaven,” I said.

Rene nodded in agreement and said, “I’m going to keep working for another five years.”

“You’ll be 67,” I pointed out. “After he retires,” Mario suggested, “you could take his place.”

“Never,” I said. “It would be the height of folly. Besides, I’m one grandfathe­r who is happy being a bump on a log.”

Jerry Zezima writes a humor column for Tribune News

Service and is the author of six books. His latest is “One for the Ageless: How to Stay Young and Immature Even If You’re Really Old.” Email: Jerryz111@ optonline.net. Blog: jerryzezim­a. blogspot.com.

 ?? JERRY ZEZIMA/ TNS ?? Rene Funez removes the top portion of an oak tree whose limbs, twigs and branches were hanging over power lines.
JERRY ZEZIMA/ TNS Rene Funez removes the top portion of an oak tree whose limbs, twigs and branches were hanging over power lines.

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