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why are these sycamores shaped like this?


Mike Dempsey
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Not retrenchment in any way shape or form :-)

 

with this tree it could easily be argued that what is happening is the end result of accidental and unintentionally excessive crown lifting leading to forced crown retrenchment :biggrin:

 

Basically those miners gave this Sycamore 2 chances at life, good on them :thumbup:

retrench.jpg.5d21c0d09eccb7b7ffb9c9e05473368c.jpg

Edited by scotspine1
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I just thought it was fascinating that it looked like 2 trees, one in front of the other and not just one individual tree and I hadn't noticed anything like it before. This then leads to the question of should it be trimmed back again to the condition it was like in 1983 as a kind of social history marker of just left to grow as it is now.

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with this tree it could easily be argued that what is happening is the end result of accidental and unintentionally excessive crown lifting leading to forced crown retrenchment :biggrin:

 

Basically those miners gave this Sycamore 2 chances at life, good on them :thumbup:

 

This is not my understanding of retrenchment as the upper canopy shows good vitality with no dieback & has not been affected by the removal of the lower branches & is not the result of the ageing process or root damage.:001_smile:

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