A Seattle woman is perched atop a 200-year-old red cedar tree that is scheduled to be cut down to make room for six new affordable housing units, according to a report.

The activist, nicknamed Droplet 2, told "The Jason Rantz Show" on KTTH that her goal is to occupy the area and convince arborists to refuse to cut the tree down for the building developers.

"I do wish that the council would talk to the neighbors … would talk to the tribes and say, ‘Look, we want affordable housing, and we need to have some trees stay. And why can’t we make that all happen?" Droplet 2 said.

"We can’t dig really deep, and have homes that are just the same homes we’ve seen everywhere," she continued. "We need to realize we’ve got to get creative. If we’re going to survive, we have to get creative. And it’s actually not harder, it’s funner [sic]. It’s way more fun to be creative than to do the same thing."

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Droplet 2 in a tree

The activist known as Droplet 2 said she hopes to stay in the tree for as long as it takes. (The Jason Rantz Show on KTTH )

The tree, dubbed "Luma," is in an empty residential lot in the Wedgwood neighborhood, where Legacy Group Capital is looking to build more affordable housing, according to the report.

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signs calling to save the tree

Signs posted around the lot called the public to help save the tree, dubbed "Luma." (The Jason Rantz Show on KTTH )

Droplet 2 has support of other activists on the ground who sit in lawn chairs under the shade of the tree and help provide Droplet 2 with food, water and other necessities, the report said.

signs around empty lot

A developer is looking to cut down the tree to make room for six affordable housing units, the report said. (The Jason Rantz Show on KTTH )

Droplet 2 said she plans on occupying the tree for as long as it takes.

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"If it’s a year, it’s a year. If it’s tomorrow, then it’s tomorrow," she said. "We are also just led by the Spirit of how long Luma needs us."