Home Lawn Trees: February 2008 Archives
Inspecting Trees
Consider the items on this checklist when inspecting your trees:
- Tree Condition: Poor conditions include many dead twigs, dead branches or small, off-color leaves. Good conditions include full crowns, vigorous branches, and healthy, full-sized leaves. But you need to look further...for the health of branches and trunks.
- Tree Species can affect hazards because come tree species are prone to specific types of defects. For example aspen are prone to youthful breaks due to decay; some species of maple and ash can form weak branch unions.
- Tree Age and Size are affected by constant stress. Older trees that have accumulated multiple defecs and extensive decay can be especially prone to damage.
Look for dead wood, cracks, weak branch unions, decay, cankers, root problems, and poor tree architecture.
Corrective action provides some choices, depending on the problems. You can move the tree to a better location; prune the tree or remove the tree.
For more thorough guidelines on "Recognizing Hazardous Defects in Trees," check out this helpful and estensive on-line guidebook by the USDA Forest Service.
SOURCE: Forest Service: Recognize Hazardous Defects in Trees
PROBLEM: Danger and liability
SOLUTION: Regular inspection and care of your trees with pruning, cabling, bracing or tranpanting, or removal of the tree.
If you know the name of a tree you want to consider and need more information, you can find great detailed information at your local university Extension Centers. But if you don't know tree names, you can use some of the online directories to help you select the right size, shape, color, seasonal cycles...and even the kind of seeds, nuts or fruit possible with your new mini-forest.
Trees are vital to urban livability. Trees provide shade to cool city hardscapes, they provide watershed replenishment by reducing stormwater runoff, and they provide habitat for local wildlife -- and children -- be they wild or not so wild. (Children benefit greatly by having a favorite climbing tree!)
The University of Illinois Extension provides a great directory of trees by SIZE, TOLERANCE, EXPOSURE, USE and PESTS at their website: Selecting Trees for Your Home: BY SIZE
PROBLEM: Improperly selected tree species is the greatest cause of early demise of mature trees.
SOLUTION: Select trees for their mature size and shape -- and then maintain them for longterm benefits of shade, water retention, air pollution filtration and higher property value!
