I would offer a different perspective having dealt with an infestation on our family home. (150 ash from 6 to 30 inches in diameter) I would approach it from the view point of WHEN you will cut them not IF. My focus was cutting the most hazardous trees while they still had some life so things like plunge cuts, hinges and wedges worked in a predictable way. The longer you wait the dryer and more prone to “ash snap” everything becomes, making it a more difficult and dangerous the problem. I don’t know how many trees you have and how many weekends but it was a marathon for me.
Death by EAB removes all the moisture from ash trees making them break at the base, and limb junctions etc. They also “shatter” when then hit the ground
If you don’t engage the issues your wood lot will be a tangled mess of deadfalls and widow makers in roughly 5 years. Bottom line is cutting in years 1-3 of the infestation is much safer than 4 and 5.
Death by EAB removes all the moisture from ash trees making them break at the base, and limb junctions etc. They also “shatter” when then hit the ground
If you don’t engage the issues your wood lot will be a tangled mess of deadfalls and widow makers in roughly 5 years. Bottom line is cutting in years 1-3 of the infestation is much safer than 4 and 5.