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Advice please - Yew reduction


warren
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Have been asked to reduce this yew in the local churchyard. Its been covered in ivy previously (now cleared) which has left the tree 'lion tailed'. In my limited experience of yews, i have only cut back to shoots, and never left the tree completely devoid of foliage, (which is what would happen on a reduction which is what they ultimately want to achieve here).

 

Brown & Kirkham's Pruning book says any major surgery (on Yew) should be done in late spring - fine.

 

It also suggests that (major) cutting should be done over a period of 3-4 years.

 

Given that if you prune the top of a tree - it responds by sprouting sideways and visa-versa.

 

So, the questions:

1. Do i reduce it all in one go, cutting into old wood - hoping that it will respond all over - or will removing all of the green kill it?

 

2. Cut it over a period of years - if so - what first - my thoughts are top first to encourage the laterals to sprout along their length, which would give me something to prune back to later on.

 

3. Or what?

 

The last thing i want to to is ruin this tree - mainly cos i drive past it every day and the mother in law is buried under it (legally!).

 

Thanks.

IMG_20170119_105520.jpg.5352f6af5ab24a90c2b6257731587573.jpg

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Thanks for the replies...The recent snow and wind has ripped out 1 other tree (although that has co-domenent(?) stems (4)) and someone suggested the long exposed branches on this one - with the weight just on the ends could fail if laden with snow.. There are a few densely growing branches out of picture that are likely to fail in such a scenario, which will be thinned out. But i'm increasing asking myself about the validity of the request to reduce it as requested and as asked above.

 

the pics show how 'open' the tree is, and the dense branches that are the real 'snow' threat.

IMG_20170119_105153.jpg.4ab514ab8564923aa99d6fb2e063b71e.jpg

IMG_20170119_105202.jpg.0ed3a79f3d266af40f9fdd5fad530bb2.jpg

Edited by warren
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Have been asked to reduce this yew in the local churchyard. Its been covered in ivy previously (now cleared) which has left the tree 'lion tailed'. In my limited experience of yews, i have only cut back to shoots, and never left the tree completely devoid of foliage, (which is what would happen on a reduction which is what they ultimately want to achieve here).

 

Brown & Kirkham's Pruning book says any major surgery (on Yew) should be done in late spring - fine.

 

It also suggests that (major) cutting should be done over a period of 3-4 years.

 

Given that if you prune the top of a tree - it responds by sprouting sideways and visa-versa.

 

So, the questions:

1. Do i reduce it all in one go, cutting into old wood - hoping that it will respond all over - or will removing all of the green kill it?

 

2. Cut it over a period of years - if so - what first - my thoughts are top first to encourage the laterals to sprout along their length, which would give me something to prune back to later on.

 

3. Or what?

 

The last thing i want to to is ruin this tree - mainly cos i drive past it every day and the mother in law is buried under it (legally!).

 

Thanks.

 

Q1- I doubt you'd kill it however I can't say the tree will "like" it.

Q2- removing it in stages is fine but I doubt you'd encourage lower growth. You'd get a thick load of epic or mic growth from the pruning points and shade out lower new growth over time.

 

Just because the costumer wants a hard reduction doesn't mean you have to do it. A gentle chat with them educating them with the pros and cons of a hard reduction may persuade them with an alternative option (like a smaller reduction). On the other hand some people want what they want and aren't happy until they get it (rightly so as their the paying customer) so you do as they say.

Jake

 

Sent from my SM-G920F using Arbtalk mobile app

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