George Smyth
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- Nov 18, 2024
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A bit over a year ago we had two tulip poplars struck by lightning. One was sheered in half, which resulted in about 40 feet of tree that needed to be cleaned up. The other tree that was struck took the strike to ground. In doing so the lightning ripped a line of bark off the tree all the way down (picture below). When we have wind storms we end up with large chunks of bark on the ground.
I have not seen anything that shows that the tree is dying (I don't really know about these things, so that means little), but I am wondering if something this traumatic, with a line of bark missing, is enough the end the tree's life.
Thanks for your help -
george
I have not seen anything that shows that the tree is dying (I don't really know about these things, so that means little), but I am wondering if something this traumatic, with a line of bark missing, is enough the end the tree's life.
Thanks for your help -
george