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Commercial Tree Care and Climbing
Will trimming one side cause a tree to become structurally unstable?
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<blockquote data-quote="NebClimber" data-source="post: 166738" data-attributes="member: 3680"><p>Client has a large cottonwood that has had many limbs taken off E side in the past. Now he wants the final large limb on the E side removed. It overhangs the neighbor's house. The W side has many large limbs. Will taking the last E limb cause this tree to potentially fail due to imbalance of weight.</p><p></p><p>The tree structurally very sound.</p><p></p><p>I have no pics. This is a huge cottonwood, and very stable looking. Trunk has no visible or audible defects.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Steven</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NebClimber, post: 166738, member: 3680"] Client has a large cottonwood that has had many limbs taken off E side in the past. Now he wants the final large limb on the E side removed. It overhangs the neighbor's house. The W side has many large limbs. Will taking the last E limb cause this tree to potentially fail due to imbalance of weight. The tree structurally very sound. I have no pics. This is a huge cottonwood, and very stable looking. Trunk has no visible or audible defects. Steven [/QUOTE]
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