It’s red maple. I’m going to subordinate the left side, but it seems like these situations require annual pruning to make any real progress. And in the meantime while the reductions are taking place, I’ve often thought a bracing bolt could help regardless what ANSI standards say that bracing...
Some trees are simple to know where to make reduction cuts or if caught early enough, remove an entire leader (best case scenario).
But what would you do with this mess? Would you even bother trying to develop a central leader?
This is also one of those cases where I wonder if bracing without...
I think it’s profitable but going to the nursery and figuring out what the client wants and what’s available is time consuming. And I can’t compete with the nurseries and landscapers that don’t plant properly. So I decided I’m just going to raise my prices to where I’m comfortable and if I don’t...
I bought that injector when it first came out and it leaked on my back when treating for HWA. I returned it. I think they’ve made adjustments since then and it could have been user error. It is a good company to work with for sure. But since then I kind of want the product in front of me because...
I’m just gonna throw this out there again. I had the original kioritz but I think I like this injector better.
I use it for ash treatments and other insecticide applications, growth regulator, and fertilizers designed to be applied in concentrate/with minimal water.
What makes it so appealing...
The ODNR Forester dropped off an increment borer to the village and the city planner got a couple core samples. It looks like rotten wood. They want me to take some more samples next week. There’s a couple of the apple trees that look like they should have more solid wood.
Maybe i’ll just take a shorter sample that doesn’t reach the center and just extrapolate the number of rings based on the radius. Good enough for this silly project.
They’re not very big. They are apple trees and there is a Village legend that Johnny Appleseed planted them haha.
I think the 12 inch would do just fine.
I realize it’s very unlikely they were planted in the 1800s.
Like clockwork (exactly one year ago from this post) the yellowwood shows damage from a recent frost, and the parrotia foliage is very durable.
That’s a lot of energy for the yellowwood to expend having to put out two crops of foliage every year.
I already talked to them about staying away from the roots with the mowers and Weedwhacker and I’ll reiterate that. I’m leaning towards cutting the grass very low and then adding the mulch and doing spot treatments afterwards, but I just got off the phone with a reputable product supplier that...
So you would be comfortable using glyphosate?
I guess the question is do I have them kill the grass first with glyphosate, or scalp the grass with a Weed whacker, put the mulch down and then use the glyphosate as needed when the grass pokes through the mulch?
Using the air knife would be...
I was thinking about just having them scalp it with a Weedwhacker, then apply the thick mulch, then come back with the round up to hit whatever grass makes it through.
But if we can use the round up safely, the first time, that would be ideal. Some turf can be pretty relentless.
My town uses me as a consultant and for years I have recommended putting large mulch rings around the trees at the town Square. They just told me this morning, They are planning to do just that. When I asked how they plan to remove the sod they said with an excavator. I put the kibosh on that...