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Question
AnnieDee
Hi there,
I have a large Elm tree in my garden and had a council worker come round to tell me it had Dutch Elm disease and that it would be dead within 6 weeks. That was mid August 2023. It did not die and after winter it now looks very much like a beautiful healthy tree.
I understand that the disease spreads when the beetles move in and start to eat the dying/dead bark however there is no sign of beetle. I am not questioning whether the diagnosis is correct as I believe that it is, however I'm being pushed into chopping it down now, when it does not yet seem to be a threat to other trees.
I appreciate that the idea is to get rid of it before it becomes a risk however the immediate local area has many trees marked up as having the disease (a spray painted orange X) and they have not yet been dealt with. As in, council owned land and the park immediately outside my house has infected trees that the council has left and not got round to yet for a couple of years (probably responsible for the infection of my own tree!)
It's a sad situation but I'd just like some advice on whether I should wait and see a bit longer (maybe my Elm will fight it off and be a survivor?)... It has already massively defied the expert's prediction that it would be dead within 6 weeks. Or if I should get on with chopping it down and get the council off my back, even though it feels like I'd be killing a beautiful and pretty healthy looking tree.
For additional confusion, the council have said that they will chop it down at their own cost- but I have a week to confirm.
If I'm enforced to do it in the future then I'd be paying for the chop myself which would be pretty difficult financially.
Any thoughts would be welcome, I'm so sad about losing this tree but am in no way an arborist so don't know if I should be fighting for it's rights or letting it go
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