'Squirrelman' rehoused: Facing eviction, man got home from his neighbors
I just read a wonderful story of neighbor helping neighbor.
It brought tears to me eyes and gladness to my heart!
'Squirrelman' rehoused
Published: Friday, April 11, 2008
(SOURCE: The Nashua Telegraph)
Facing eviction, man got home from his neighbors
SEATTLE (AP) – A homeless man who has spent the past two years living
in a treehouse has a new, terrestrial home just in the nick of time,
thanks to neighbors.
David
"Squirrelman" Csaky, a self-taught carpenter, learned Tuesday that
neighbors had found an aging recreational vehicle for him to occupy.
"I'm overwhelmed," Csaky said. "I started crying when they told me."
For
two years, Csaky, 52, has lived about 30 feet above the ground in a
300-square-foot self-made platform, accessible by a ladder
counterweighted with sandbags on pulleys on city land.
Csaky
outfitted the treehouse with a tent, wood stove, three chairs, shelves
and a counter with an unplumbed sink. His pets include Lucky, a rat;
Rainbow, a ferret; and Tilt, a squirrel.
He was lately threatened with eviction because the treehouse is a health and safety concern.
Brandon Ferrante, 28, and Maria Bolander, 27, who befriended him after
watching the treehouse take shape, found an aging 22-foot RV online
after they learned of Csaky's situation.
"It
broke our hearts," Ferrante said. "He's taken care of the neighborhood.
We couldn't sleep at night. We decided to make it happen."
They
and their landlords, Janet Yoder and husband Robby Rudine, agreed to
buy the rig for $500 after the owner offered a "Squirrelman" discount.
"David's a unique character but a good neighbor," Yoder said.
After delivering the RV Tuesday evening, owner Timothy Custer decided instead to sell it to Csaky for a penny.
"It's Dave's new house," Custer said.
To make the house a home, Ferrante said, the task is now to find a permanent parking place.
"We don't want to see it get towed," he said.
Csaky,
who got his nickname for his ability to tame squirrel, said he was
amazed at the public attention, including radio television and radio
interviews and talk show appearances.
"This is the beginning of a new life," he said.

Photos by The Associated Press
Dave
Csaky pulls up the ladder to his treehouse in the Eastlake Neighborhood
of Seattle on Saturday. A little more than a week ago, city workers
arrived unannounced and put pink-ribboned survey stakes around the
cluster of trees that hold Csaky's home.