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Posted

Last autumn I cut back a beech pollard on a property for sale near me. The new owner has decided that they don’t want the tree as it’s too close to their house. They have offered it to me as I have the space for it, but it has to be moved now, not next winter. 
 

Has anyone here moved a large beech trunk during a wet summer successfully? It will be possible to water it in its new home. Should I put pipes under the roots? I’m thinking of putting a layer of well rotted compost at the bottom of the new hole mixed with topsoil to try encourage roots. Is there anything else I can do? 
 

It’s the tree in the centre of the photo.IMG_1361.thumb.jpeg.1db36b83524a49d83a53aa6bf00f44f5.jpeg

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Posted

Non runner imo. wrong time of year, tree is behind the fence so no access for truck mounted spade, (looks too big anyway) tree is also too well established meaning a lot of root loss which reduces its chances of surviving even more. Then there's the cost of it. Spend 500 quid on a bagged specimen beech from a nursery and it'll do better than that one ever would, even if the transplant was a success.

I'd estimate moving and repositioning that properly to be a 10 to 15 k job (tree spade, crane, diggers, crew, transport, aftercare etc) total guess as I've never moved anything of any real size. So if anyone wants to correct me there I'm happy to be wrong.

 

  • Like 2
Posted

Forget the tree spade this is a Newman frame or box job yes it’s possible, but is it worth it, i would suggest 10 to 15 k to move well, and don’t forget the tidy up after. Nice idea but non starter 

 

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

 

 

Won't be easy ir cheap to do it properly

 

Money no object with the right machines its probably  its possible

 

100 Year Old Compton Oak Move Successful in League City - YouTube

 

Root ball gonna weight abit will need to be the size in pic above etc or bigger for a 40yrs old tree -  also wrong time of yrs isn't gonna help chances of sucess much.

 

I think thoose tree spades are to way to small?

 

Very specialized job...

Edited by Stere
Posted

A 4-5m specimen from Barchams will cost you just over £1k; do the math when compared to moving that!

The chances of successful establishment are probably in a similar ratio!

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