You don't know what windfirming is do you? Course not, it involves topping trees so its bad. I will explain it to you, but again, with so many letters behind your name.....and it is nothing to do with utility work.
Windfirming is done when an area is clearcut, it is done to prevent the trees that are along the edge, usually beside a creek, from blowing down. The trees right on the edge of the clearcut for about 60' back into the standing timber are spiral pruned and topped, at around 6"-8".
Without this, these trees, which have stood for hundreds of years will blow down, will, not maybe. I have seen it happen, actually seen it, seen the results many times. So, when we windfirm, we are saving the shelter over creeks, leaving wildlife corridors open. The whole idea is not to save these trees forever, it is to give the understory time to grow.
I have no desire to ruin trees, the windfirming work I did and Jak does now is a good thing. You saying my needs are...."a few bucks and some beer" is a slur, a putdown, just like how you repeatedly call people bottom feeders and hacks. You have no knowledge of my desires, wants or wishes.
So again, it is for you to be educated, about what goes on in other places.
I understand the effects of clear-cuts and the potential for failure on edge-trees. I have never heard or seen of your prescription being prescribed or executed. Yes, it is true, that a tree that has been cut in half or has had its height reduced severely, is less likely to fall over in this setting. But, as you solve one problem, you have also opened up yourself other problems, unless you are trying to make snags, wildlife habitat, trees with heart rot, etc.. I don’t think you will get foresters or timber producers prescribing your recommendation.
Do you have any documentation, research, or papers written on this procedure recommending it?
Here is a little I’ve studied on the subject but I realize that I’ve got much to learn. The more I learn, the more I realize what I do not know.
Hazard Tree Evaluation and Risk Management
• Certified Tree Risk Assessor #168, Pacific Northwest Chapter of the International Society of Arboriculture, Portland, OR. 2006
• International Tree Failure Database Assessor, ISA-PNW Conference, Corvallis, OR, 2007
• Hazard Tree Evaluation Workshop, American Society of Consulting Arborist Annual Conference, Portland, Maine, 1993
• Tree Risk Assessment, Ed Hays, Pacific Northwest Chapter – ISA, Spokane, WA. 2007
• Case Studies in Risk Assessment, ASCA Annual Conference, Napa, CA. 2006
• Basic Tree Risk Assessment, International Society of Arboriculture CEU, 2007
• Managing Risk in the Urban Forest Part 1, International Society of Arboriculture CEU, 2007
• Managing Risk in the Urban Forest Part 2, International Society of Arboriculture CEU, 2007
• Managing Risk in the Urban Forest Part 3, International Society of Arboriculture CEU, 2007
• Managing Risk in the Urban Forest Part 4, International Society of Arboriculture CEU, 2007
• Understanding the Connection between Dynamic Wind Forces and Hazard Trees, Ken James, ISA-PNW Conference, Corvallis, OR, 2007
• Tree Risk Assessment, Victor D. Merullo, American Society of Consulting Arborist Annual Conference, Nashville Tennessee, 2007
• Root Cutting and Root Risk Assessment, E. Thomas Smiley, Ph.D., The Bartlett Research Lab, American Society of Consulting Arborist Annual Conference, Nashville Tennessee, 2007
• Tree Failure Risk Evaluations, International Society of Arboriculture Compendium CEU, 2008