Murdoch
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Posts posted by Murdoch
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27 minutes ago, EdwardC said:
If your stated reason for undertaking pruning to the tree is because you are concerned that the branch might fail and cause damage, you should include with the application written evidence from an appropriate expert to support the stated reason. For this it would be best to get advice/report from an arboricultral consultant.
Not what I meant.
We have huge concerns that this branch, should it be allowed to grow continuously, could split the main trunk and kill it....... which we don't want to happen.......
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3 hours ago, EdwardC said:
I've read the post, but you don't say what your problem is. Why do you want it pruned, what reasons did the tree surgeon and FC Officer give to justify their recommendation.
If you are going to put an application in to prune the tree you should know what it is you are trying to achieve by pruning. To do that you need to know what the problem with the tree is.
You will have to state your reasons, and the works should address those. E.g. the tree is shading the garden so I would like to crown thin it by 15%. A tree surgeon and FC Officer said it needed trimmed is likely to result in a refusal of your application.
There is advice on tree pruning operations and what they can achieve in BS3998
Apologies - new to this tree "business"
When we bought the house 5 years ago a tree "person" expressed concern about the lowest branch and the weight / "pull" on the tree / trunk
Light isn't the issue here
We want to protect the tree!
Hope this helps - or doesn't confuse further!?
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13 hours ago, EdwardC said:
So what are your reasons for pruning the tree: Safety, then you will need to provide written evidence from an appropriate expert. Or poor living conditions, loss of light to the house and garden, overbearing etc. Then it might be easier, and cheaper, to justify.
The FC Officer and tree surgeon won't be deciding your application. Convincing the tree officer is what you have to do.
I'm not sure why the branch union is a 'poor one', or why it is 'compromised', it looks fine. Is the branch subsiding, well it doesn't look like it from the photos, and it's putting on good growth to address the stresses imposed on it. Thigmomorphogenesis and all that.
An Arb. Consultant would be able to give better, and impartial advice having had a look at the tree in the flesh, rather than someone on an internet site with very limited information.
This is our exact problem ............... read my OP .............. all 3 people who have commented HAVE been on site
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whats bracing?
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We have a large Ash which is covered by a TPO ...
The local Council man says it doesn't need trimming back
A local tree man says it does (don't think he was touting for work)
a representation of the Forestry Commission visiting to look at our Oak for the OPM say it does
Opinions on whether a well written justification would get approved ?
Thanks
Ash with a TPO
in Homeowners Tree Advice Forum
Posted
Thanks for that ............ if anyone is close to Woking and wants to do this for us please get in touch .... £££