oenophile
New Member
Basic Question: Is the black walnut tree that needs to be removed from my yard in the Menlo Park / Palo Alto area of California (SF Bay Area) valuable? How would I go about finding someone who would value it and defray removal costs (or who would otherwise safely remove and attempt to sell and provide value back)?
Details:
We have a beautiful 50+ year-old black walnut tree in our back yard. We recently called a certified arborist out to look at an olive tree that isn't doing well. The arborist immediately looked at the black walnut tree and said "I'm here for the walnut tree, right?" We knew the the walnut tree was old and not doing well, but hadn't thought it was in serious trouble. The arborist advised us that the tree was dying and should be removed. (The arborist pointed to mushrooms and other fungus growing all over the roots in areas, and multiple dead limbs 100 feet up.)
We are waiting for an official estimate, but due to the suburban location (at the corner of four lots in the back of each) and the difficulty of safe removal, we suspect something very expensive, around $5,000 to remove it. The tree is very large, and in the back yard of a house with no easy access (narrow side yards, no back yard access to street), and overhangs three or four lots and at least 1 house.
We are planning on getting a second opinion from another arborist before doing anything. So my question is not, whether it needs to be removed. (We will be very careful before doing that.)
Here's the issue: The removal is very expensive and we'd love to defray some or all of the cost by selling the wood.
It doesn't seem like the arborist (or the tree company he's contracting with) is valuing the wood of the tree except perhaps as firewood. I've read in multiple places that black walnut trees can sometimes be valuable. However, all the sites mentioning this say to contact "your local forestry evaluator" or your local "walnut tree buyer". Walnut trees are really rare in the Palo Alto / Menlo Park / San Francisco CA Bay Area, and I don't know where to look to find someone who could remove it and sell it to defray the removal costs.
I do trust the arborist (we like him and will likely end up using him), but I'm also a bit suspicious that the tree removal company will simply take advantage of my ignorance and the fact that there aren't really any companies that specialize in valuing the trees around here, and will truck it out and sell it for a material amount without providing me with the value.
I'm not trying to make a buck, here. I'd much rather keep the tree. But it would be nice to find out for certain if the tree is valuable and to figure out if there's a way to capture that value to defray the extremely high removal costs.
Any ideas?
THANKS!
(Oh, and the olive tree is fine!)
Details:
We have a beautiful 50+ year-old black walnut tree in our back yard. We recently called a certified arborist out to look at an olive tree that isn't doing well. The arborist immediately looked at the black walnut tree and said "I'm here for the walnut tree, right?" We knew the the walnut tree was old and not doing well, but hadn't thought it was in serious trouble. The arborist advised us that the tree was dying and should be removed. (The arborist pointed to mushrooms and other fungus growing all over the roots in areas, and multiple dead limbs 100 feet up.)
We are waiting for an official estimate, but due to the suburban location (at the corner of four lots in the back of each) and the difficulty of safe removal, we suspect something very expensive, around $5,000 to remove it. The tree is very large, and in the back yard of a house with no easy access (narrow side yards, no back yard access to street), and overhangs three or four lots and at least 1 house.
We are planning on getting a second opinion from another arborist before doing anything. So my question is not, whether it needs to be removed. (We will be very careful before doing that.)
Here's the issue: The removal is very expensive and we'd love to defray some or all of the cost by selling the wood.
It doesn't seem like the arborist (or the tree company he's contracting with) is valuing the wood of the tree except perhaps as firewood. I've read in multiple places that black walnut trees can sometimes be valuable. However, all the sites mentioning this say to contact "your local forestry evaluator" or your local "walnut tree buyer". Walnut trees are really rare in the Palo Alto / Menlo Park / San Francisco CA Bay Area, and I don't know where to look to find someone who could remove it and sell it to defray the removal costs.
I do trust the arborist (we like him and will likely end up using him), but I'm also a bit suspicious that the tree removal company will simply take advantage of my ignorance and the fact that there aren't really any companies that specialize in valuing the trees around here, and will truck it out and sell it for a material amount without providing me with the value.
I'm not trying to make a buck, here. I'd much rather keep the tree. But it would be nice to find out for certain if the tree is valuable and to figure out if there's a way to capture that value to defray the extremely high removal costs.
Any ideas?
THANKS!
(Oh, and the olive tree is fine!)