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Managing Trees with Decay & Dysfunction


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  • 4 weeks later...
Woodland beech with multiple fruiting of Ganoderma australe ..

 

so, 4 years on from the reduction (feb 2013) we undertook resistograph readings to ascertain the t/R ratio of the extent of heart white rot and to determine the residual wall thickness.

 

we took readings at all cardinal points, here are a couple of them.....

 

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Woodland beech with multiple fruiting of Ganoderma australe.....

 

below, the result of the St Judes storm......

 

the last shot appears to show the wall 4 barrier of CODIT between the sound sap wood and the advancing lignin degredation.

 

I assume that this dark thin barrier is what Francis Schwartze refers to as the Polyphenolic R(eaction) zone.

 

 

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Very well documented reflecting your teams serious and (IMO) balanced and proportionate approach to highly valuable assets in their specific locations with all the particular circumstances associated with those locations.

 

Well done David :thumbup1:

 

Totally agree with this :thumbup1:

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Totally agree with this :thumbup1:

Thanks APC, appreciated :001_smile:

 

 

Roadside ash with Inonotus hispidus in the crown stems, a heavily included union & shear cracks in the basal section of the trunk.

 

Guys went up to have a closer look to inform the reduction spec & priority importance in our schedule.

 

We concluded that it would be maintained as a topped tree at 50% its original height for its habitat value.

 

Work to be carried out this winter.

 

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St Judes storm in October had other ideas.

 

The principal failure occured at thepoint of the included union & not at the site of Inonotus decay.

 

 

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Ash are so straight-grained--ours are also prone to splitting.

 

So the last pic is of the 50% topping? I wonder how much habitat objectives drove that high a spec, but haven't worked with that species. How do you reckon the closure and sprouting will be?

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