Could you tell me what you think?
I'll tell you no worries what I think.
Here's the picture.
The trees have been mutilated.
Whilst that species of euc typically takes a while to decay it never the less does decay. However in my experience the problems are beneath the ground.
Rather than repeat a bunch of stuff I have already written about I'll post a copy with a link.
Source:
http://www.weareallabouttrees.com.au/pruning.html
it's important you understand the species that it applies too, not all trees can take it. Generally the species are deciduous (drop leaves for winter) and because pollarding removes all growth it's good to have a species that atleast has become accustomed to being defoliated. These deciduous trees store energy for the spring burst of leaves and shoots so they are better able to recuperate from a 100% prune. Some of the suitable species are willow, lime, ash, field maple, holly, hornbeam, oak, plane and beech. See something familiar? You dont grow those up here! We're in a subtropical environment not temperate.
The euc needs a foliage/root ratio to live. When it's defoliated then it relies upon it's stored reserves to sprout, in drought guess what, many die!
Then the tree also needs a certain amount of foliage to sustain the root system and hopefully do some compartmentalizing, when it cannot some roots die and decay and some of the foliage dies off too.
The multiple wounds become pest condo's, a huge signal is broadcast ... "yo bugs, huge banquet here".
A myriad of bugs come, sap suckers, borers etc. The tree is trying it's best to deal with the heavy dose of pruning but now the bugs well that's getting a bit much.
However, the trees are deemed more stable from an engineering perspective as they have less weight on extended lever arms and smaller sail. Yeeha, engineers win the day because the probability of failure is now reduced ... for a while.
The maintenance costs and the prize view of these mutilations is now raising eyebrows. Is this OK because we judge it from an engineers perspective and as long as the tree lives it's OK? Were there other options?
Yes, I have spoken a lot about pruning eucs and the difficulty in reduction pruning them. Long extended self lions tailed leaders that once established are very hard to do much about other than thinning ... and thinning on the tips not cutting the inner branches out.
So what has happened here is an unsuitable species was planted in the that spot for the task etc. Even lots of formative pruning at a young age would have been labour intensive to get a shorter more compact tree.
So now you are in the maintenance mode. The pruning regime of 3 years might drop to 2 years, dead wood will have to be watched, tree stability at ground level is a concern if decay sets in especially on any leaning trees.
It's the negative spiral now.
The difference between doing that to a small tree and large tree is the sheer volume of the vascular cambium that tree has to support. You see all that wood, well that's a lot of work keeping that shell alive.
Here's a smaller euc we thinned and formative pruned to give you an idea.
Now what I would suggest if retention of those trees is desired is some soil treatments. If need be bore a hole through concrete or road to inject area on frequent basis (maybe 6 monthly).
This is not a fertilizer boost program but a soil conditioning with mycorrhizal fungi, ensure you incorporate silica or silicon in that mix as it hardens cell walls and leaves etc making it tougher for chewing and sucking insects.
Thought to be given to future pruning regime's frequency and trying not to prune everything off, keep some foliage on, try to manage a newer smaller crown, evergreens are just that ... they need leaves.