The back story with this is I guess someone else had started the trees a few years ago and never came back to finish.
We did remove two fence panels closest to the one tree that I thought was the most hazardous just to have a little more room to work with.
The lift or crane would’ve been ideal. I guess they did get some quotes from someone who had a crane long enough to reach or a lift small enough to get back there. I did consider the lift option.
I wasn’t the one climbing, but I asked the climber throughout how did it feel and he said it felt okay, some movement but that could also be due to the fact that there were no branches, etc. Nothing that made him or me second guess what we were doing. And we took it at a controlled pace, kept in mind the climber’s movement with the spikes, etc.
@southsoundtree I believe they were white pine. Honestly I don’t feel it was too close of a call. We had done a lot of planning and discussing about it, I talked to the homeowner explaining that if anything didn’t feel right we may have to call it, so I felt confident that while there was risk we had taken some steps to try and mitigate the risk. Had that second spar not been near the one that I thought was the most hazardous, I might’ve turned it down or considered another option.
Taking on trees like this hasn’t necessarily been the norm for me. I generally will turn something down if I think it really is the right call, whatever the reason might be.