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Crown lifting


Swannytwo
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Nope, none what so ever.

 

Trees generally grow in proportion, and will have a root system that corresponds with their crown. Reducing the crown, even by minor removal via crown lift, does not automatically reduce the root system - it just means less crown volume for the same root system. (Which is why tree generally tend to grow back like buggery when you give them a good wallop.)

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Off the original question a bit, but what about pollards?

 

If faced with pollards in a proposed development area for example, would it still be valid to calculate RPA from stem diameter and table D1?

 

Or might that be a case of digging exploratory pits to check the spread of the root mass and then presenting "a soundly based arboricultural assessment of likely root distribution"?

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