Had a nice challenge today, a pretty large big leaf maple in serious decline. These trees usually die from the top down and wind up with very large, dead and brittle tops. This one had the dead tops cut out... a decade ago maybe...? It was past time to do it again, as the customer wanted to remove the dead so it was safe, but keep the tree a few more years. For whatever reason, THREE other companies passed on this job, but honestly I didn't see what the big deal was...
The maple in question, maybe 80' tall, in the corner of a yard, fences on two sides, lean towards the open yard and partly towards the house. Luckily I had a tall fir in the neighbors yard (other side of the fence) to use as a tie-in when working the dead maple stems, and that made all the difference in being a safe project.
Looking up at two of the three dead tops. Set a redirect on my climbing line and did a bunch of limb-walking with a pole-saw to remove the lower dead branch tips, before trying to piece out and drop the tops through the remaining live limbs.
Looking down, on spurs to work the dead trunks.
And since I've never actually posted a picture of myself... This is after removing the three dead tops. Most of my work is out on properties in the forest, so working in town was a nice little change.
The mess below. It was a 'cut and leave a mess job' that I did solo, no rigging, just careful aiming on this project.
The results. Obviously the maple will continue to decline over time, but this work brought the tree down to a level and to trunk material large and solid enough that it shouldn't be a safety hazard anymore. Maybe in 5 years I'll be back to finish the job, who knows.
Edit: And oh yah, like an idiot I tried to karate-chop a small piece of deadwood, annnnnd it didn't break. Now my hand hurts. At least the customer gave me a piece of her freshly baked chocolate zucchini cake....