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Commercial Tree Care and Climbing
Does this tree look safe or needs "reduction"?
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<blockquote data-quote="treeseer" data-source="post: 354260" data-attributes="member: 4077"><p>If the forks look prone to splitting, a light reduction is in order. That would at the same time reduce owner's fear of size, and arborist's concern of failure from defect. looks like 1 hour's work; should be a worthwhile investment for owner.</p><p>"maple grows so quickly it would fill in double what you cut in a year or so."</p><p>Dada, Tree is mature enough that a light reduction will not spur massive sprouting. first job is to ID the species so you know what you're dealing with.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="treeseer, post: 354260, member: 4077"] If the forks look prone to splitting, a light reduction is in order. That would at the same time reduce owner's fear of size, and arborist's concern of failure from defect. looks like 1 hour's work; should be a worthwhile investment for owner. "maple grows so quickly it would fill in double what you cut in a year or so." Dada, Tree is mature enough that a light reduction will not spur massive sprouting. first job is to ID the species so you know what you're dealing with. [/QUOTE]
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