jomoco
Tree Freak
There are a few things about this funeral party that strike me as mighty peculiar.
First this talk of a spiral crack. I see the crack all right, but its only apparently limited to the bark and cambium, and it is relatively vertical not spiral to my eye at all. There is no visual indications that the heartwood or xylem structural supportwood is indeed cracked or weakened at all. This could easily be a case of bark damage sustained in the trees youth from rough handling by whoever transplanted it. It would be somewhat ironic to cut down a tree after its 30 years of diligent generation of cambial wound repair tissue sufficient to finally close the wound to weather, only to be whacked down for its remarkable ability to heal itself after being so seriously
scraped of skin in its youth.
Your assertion that the spruce in question here is 95 years old is highly questionable at best in my opinion. To my old experienced arborist eyes the tree is no more than 55 or 60 feet tall in your photo of it. My guess on it's maximum potential age is no more than 35 years old, with a very slight 10 degree lean downwind. This small degree of downwind lean is perfectly natural
and even expected in a solitary unsheltered spruce fighting the wind its whole life.
Now the thing that really doesn't click for me in my old worn out brain, is your fear of this tree failing in the western prevailing and falling on the clients house. Now your post states that the crack faces west on the tension wood side of the tree, the crack faces the camera that the picture was taken with.
So the camera is pointing due east along the path 180 degrees off the crack itself, let's assume a huge howling wind came out of the west and actually blows this very tree over to the east, to my eye that lands it on top of the little bitty deciduous trees to the east, not on the house, the tree will miss the house by a whopping 24 inches or 2 feet easy!
Are you aware that there are laws against picking on abused juveniles?
Why are you bending over backwards to rationalize killing this pubescent teen?
If you really want to do what's best for the tree and customer, deadwood the tree for a reasonable fee and assure the client that it's a healthy tree with a slight natural lean to the east and an almost completely healed old wound.
I would have no qualms about drilling a half inch inspection hole right through just the bark and cambium only to ascertain visually if the crack actually penetrates the xylem or heartwood that gives this tree its structural integrity.
New cambium tissue will cover the shallow inspection hole in it in less than two years or so. Offer this to the client to reassure both him and yourself at a modest fee along with the deadwooding.
I hope you don't feel insulted by my observations, and remember they are only the opinions of a crusty old treeman with old climbers disease.
jomoco
First this talk of a spiral crack. I see the crack all right, but its only apparently limited to the bark and cambium, and it is relatively vertical not spiral to my eye at all. There is no visual indications that the heartwood or xylem structural supportwood is indeed cracked or weakened at all. This could easily be a case of bark damage sustained in the trees youth from rough handling by whoever transplanted it. It would be somewhat ironic to cut down a tree after its 30 years of diligent generation of cambial wound repair tissue sufficient to finally close the wound to weather, only to be whacked down for its remarkable ability to heal itself after being so seriously
scraped of skin in its youth.
Your assertion that the spruce in question here is 95 years old is highly questionable at best in my opinion. To my old experienced arborist eyes the tree is no more than 55 or 60 feet tall in your photo of it. My guess on it's maximum potential age is no more than 35 years old, with a very slight 10 degree lean downwind. This small degree of downwind lean is perfectly natural
and even expected in a solitary unsheltered spruce fighting the wind its whole life.
Now the thing that really doesn't click for me in my old worn out brain, is your fear of this tree failing in the western prevailing and falling on the clients house. Now your post states that the crack faces west on the tension wood side of the tree, the crack faces the camera that the picture was taken with.
So the camera is pointing due east along the path 180 degrees off the crack itself, let's assume a huge howling wind came out of the west and actually blows this very tree over to the east, to my eye that lands it on top of the little bitty deciduous trees to the east, not on the house, the tree will miss the house by a whopping 24 inches or 2 feet easy!
Are you aware that there are laws against picking on abused juveniles?
Why are you bending over backwards to rationalize killing this pubescent teen?
If you really want to do what's best for the tree and customer, deadwood the tree for a reasonable fee and assure the client that it's a healthy tree with a slight natural lean to the east and an almost completely healed old wound.
I would have no qualms about drilling a half inch inspection hole right through just the bark and cambium only to ascertain visually if the crack actually penetrates the xylem or heartwood that gives this tree its structural integrity.
New cambium tissue will cover the shallow inspection hole in it in less than two years or so. Offer this to the client to reassure both him and yourself at a modest fee along with the deadwooding.
I hope you don't feel insulted by my observations, and remember they are only the opinions of a crusty old treeman with old climbers disease.
jomoco