The Truth about the Vashon Island Bike Tree

The Truth about the Vashon Island Bike Tree. Bicycles Create Change.com 6th September, 2019.
Image: Pintrest

Who doesn’t love a good urban legend – especially one about a bicycle?!

The best example of this is the Vashon Island Bike Tree.

The Vashon Island Bike Tree is an old rusted children’s bicycle that has been ‘eaten’ by a tree in Washington. How it actually got there is a mystery and subject to much speculation.

The Vashon Island Bike Tree is still a major tourist attraction and has been immortalised in the children’s book Red Ranger Came Calling by Berkley Breathed.

The Truth about the Vashon Island Bike Tree. Bicycles Create Change.com 6th September, 2019.
Red Ranger Came Calling. Image: Flamingos and Butterflies

Recently, Sam Dickson (Vintage News) set out to find as much as he could about this urban legend and to see how much of the story is actually true. Although I appreciate Sam’s dedication, I still really like the community-developed story. It has been embellished and retold so many times you are not sure what is true and what is not – which is part of the mystique.

The Bike Tree is a local myth and adds a little charm, mystery and history to the area. For those who love the original urban legend stop reading now! For those who want a bit more factual input read on. Either way – spoiler alert ahead! Here is what Sam found:

The Truth about the Vashon Island Bike Tree. Bicycles Create Change.com 6th September, 2019.
Image: Tarik Saleh

We have all seen this picture on the internet a thousand times. A tale of a lad that went off to war and left his bike against a tree.

He never returned from the war so his parents left it there as a memorial. We know this story, right? You have to love the internet for its eccentricities and this story is another example (remember the catfish that swallowed a Nazi?).

The headline itself is the biggest clue – the USA did not enter WWI in 1914. It entered in 1917. They also never sent boys off to war – looks like a 10 years-old bike.

Furthermore – this isn’t a bike from the early part of the 20th century. So lets have a look at the real story behind this picture.

Vashon Island Bike Tree. We don’t have to go back to 1914 for the beginning of this story – in fact we just have to go back to the 1950s. You see, this is a bike from the 1950s and it belong to an 8 years-old boy called Don Puz. According to The Seattle Times.

The story of how the bike came to be in the tree is told by a retired King County deputy sheriff, Don Puz, who now lives in Kennewick. The only bike he rides now is a stationary one. He grew up on the island and lived here until 1992. Puz tells how, in 1954, his dad died in a house fire, leaving his mom with five children.

The island came together and donated various items to get the family going again.

Among those items was a bicycle for young Don. “I never liked the bike. It was like a tricycle, but with two wheels. It had hard rubber tires and skinny little handlebars,” he says. Puz says eventually the family moved to a home near what became Sound Food, but which then was a swampy area. “We liked playing there, catching polliwogs. We’d get into ponds and mud. It was a good place,” he says. Sometime in the mid-1950s, says Puz, he forgot the bike in that swampy acreage and never bothered to get it back. Good riddance.

Then, in 1995, when visiting a sister still living on the island, she took Puz to see the local landmark. “The first words out of my mouth were, ‘That’s my bike!’ ” he says. “There was no doubt in my mind.” He still holds no love for the bike or its current decrepit state. Says Puz, “A bike itself doesn’t have any feelings.”

“I don’t think I own it anymore,” Don Puz says a little wistfully, a little bit in awe, perhaps, of how time makes up its own stories. “I threw it away a long time ago. I think the tree owns it now”.

It has now become a major tourist attraction and also a target for souvenir hunters and very little remains of the bike. Locals are trying to keep it alive by replacing the stolen parts but it is getting harder and harder to find replacement parts for a bike this old.

How the bike ended up in the tree probably wasn’t a case of a young fir sapling growing under the bike and swallowing it, says professor Elizabeth Van Volkenburgh, of the University of Washington’s Department of Biology. “That bicycle would have been too heavy for a young tree,” she says. More likely, says Van Volkenburgh, when the tree was older, “somebody hung that bicycle on the tree”.

The Truth about the Vashon Island Bike Tree. Bicycles Create Change.com 6th September, 2019.
The bike as it is today. Image: Tarik Saleh

The BBC reported:

A spokeswoman from Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park said: “The mature sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) has significant cultural and historic heritage which is recognised locally, regionally and nationally.

“The tree has been recorded on a number of veteran tree surveys such as Loch Lomond and the Trossachs Countryside Trust 2013 and Woodland Trust ‘Ancient Tree Hunt’ 2009.”

The Park Authority says a tree preservation order would protect the tree in the event of any future change in land use in the area.

The Truth about the Vashon Island Bike Tree. Bicycles Create Change.com 6th September, 2019.
Image: Kent’s Bike Blog

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