Birdyman88
Branched out member
- Location
- Arlington
I think the pictures are good enough to see what's going on. I think it's BS that the neighbor can hold up the tree owner from cleaning up his property in a timely manner. There might be a lawsuit in that somewhere too. I think the piece going onto neighbors house can be kept suspended by wrapping a chain around split at the broken trunk section in a figure 8 (or cinching it on each piece) and binding it down tight while you remove the rest of the lead. If anything, removing the lead will make it lighter and help ensure the chain will keep the limb/trunk from splitting any further. As for the other leader, it doesn't look like its affecting anything on the neighbors side. Downside is that your gonna have to make two trips to get everything completed, but you can work it into price.
We just had to do something similar after a storm, but instead of chaining, we made a prop for the butt of the offending limb using two 10 ft 4x6's with a bolt pivot point, then cut the limb free from the rest of the tree. We used a ratchet strap to hold the butt end of piece to prop. Worked like a charm. We were trying protect two [crappy old] AC units on the neighbors side until their tree service could get out. A prop is probably too short for your scenario, which is why I say chain it.
We just had to do something similar after a storm, but instead of chaining, we made a prop for the butt of the offending limb using two 10 ft 4x6's with a bolt pivot point, then cut the limb free from the rest of the tree. We used a ratchet strap to hold the butt end of piece to prop. Worked like a charm. We were trying protect two [crappy old] AC units on the neighbors side until their tree service could get out. A prop is probably too short for your scenario, which is why I say chain it.










