Greg_L
Participating member
- Location
- Bloomington, IN
Greetings!
I’m the campus Arborist at IU’s main campus here in Bloomington, IN. We have a Bur oak that’s estimated to be between 180-200 years old. She’s a 58.5” DBH monster with a drip line diameter over 100’. Needless to say, she takes top priority in our plant health care program.
I thought you all in particular would find our recent limb propping project interesting. We ran sonic tomography on the base a few years back to get a grasp on the size of a cavity that was just visible from the exterior and decided it would be prudent to prop a few of the massive overextended limbs, and just recently got our hardware finally installed.
The props were custom designed and fabricated, and are 4x4“ steel tubing that rest on 4x4’ floating plates (we did zero digging), and at the tops there’s a hand-cranked jack system that allows for gross and fine adjustment. The actual heads are clamshell-shaped hexagons lined with lumber, so we didn’t drill into anything. As the years pass and the limbs grow, we can swap our pieces of the lumber lining for smaller thicknesses to allow for expansion, etc.
Pardon the photo…it was taken with a wide-angle lens, but they are quite straight (compare to the stone wall to the right). The last image was taken in 1900, and the tree is in the background on the left.
I’m the campus Arborist at IU’s main campus here in Bloomington, IN. We have a Bur oak that’s estimated to be between 180-200 years old. She’s a 58.5” DBH monster with a drip line diameter over 100’. Needless to say, she takes top priority in our plant health care program.
I thought you all in particular would find our recent limb propping project interesting. We ran sonic tomography on the base a few years back to get a grasp on the size of a cavity that was just visible from the exterior and decided it would be prudent to prop a few of the massive overextended limbs, and just recently got our hardware finally installed.
The props were custom designed and fabricated, and are 4x4“ steel tubing that rest on 4x4’ floating plates (we did zero digging), and at the tops there’s a hand-cranked jack system that allows for gross and fine adjustment. The actual heads are clamshell-shaped hexagons lined with lumber, so we didn’t drill into anything. As the years pass and the limbs grow, we can swap our pieces of the lumber lining for smaller thicknesses to allow for expansion, etc.
Pardon the photo…it was taken with a wide-angle lens, but they are quite straight (compare to the stone wall to the right). The last image was taken in 1900, and the tree is in the background on the left.
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