Interesting, thanks for your comments.
That Banyan tree is gigantic. How dramatic that it fails 3 days after the arborist's "A-OK" assessment. Lucky no one was near it.
>>All things considered though, if you are worried about the balance of the tree and then potentially coming over, as well as possible disease from the spike damage, you may be able to just get them to take the whole tree down next time for free especially if they know they messed up by using the spikes.
Yes I'm hoping that's the case. Seems indefensible really, considering the lop-sided cuts, spike damage, high wind hill and proximity of our house.
>>Just curious, looks like the other tree was on the east side of your house and was blown to the south/west? Is that normal wind direction for your area?
The winds are very strong up here, it's one of the highest points in Sydney. It's called 'Pennant Hills' since the early settlers used flag signals on this hill to communicate between Sydney harbour and up-river at Parramatta. I have no idea which way the wind normally blows, it appears quite random to me.
Here's another picture of the uprooted gum tree that came down in Feb 2020 on the other side of our house, a narrow scrape. Luckily we were out at the time.
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