I think we agree on more points than we disagree. I am just not inclined to cut down trees because they have flaws. Of all the catastrophic tree failures that I see, I don't think I have ever seen a multi-stem silver maple fail at the base unless it was blatantly rotten.
On the other hand, they lose lots of top branches in practically every ice storm. The tree pictured in this thread appears to have had quite a bit of lion-tailing in the past, so I assume that it really doesn't have a very big load on the split.
I didn't see any prominent targets beneath it either, so I vote to keep it. When I get a customer that asks me about the health of the tree, I always ask them if they would rather keep the tree, or cut it down.
This "customer" said "I'd really like to save it if possible anyway, or at least keep it standing until it dies". My response to that, based on my rather extensive experience at cutting down and trimming silver maples is to keep the tree.
On the other hand, they lose lots of top branches in practically every ice storm. The tree pictured in this thread appears to have had quite a bit of lion-tailing in the past, so I assume that it really doesn't have a very big load on the split.
I didn't see any prominent targets beneath it either, so I vote to keep it. When I get a customer that asks me about the health of the tree, I always ask them if they would rather keep the tree, or cut it down.
This "customer" said "I'd really like to save it if possible anyway, or at least keep it standing until it dies". My response to that, based on my rather extensive experience at cutting down and trimming silver maples is to keep the tree.
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