
I hope that you enjoy these posts and find them interesting and possibly informative.
Read on!




I noticed this tree while I was waiting at my bus stop one morning. It is tucked in with a few others so it doesn't stand out as much as it might if it were alone, but the top is clearly dead. When I got closer to take a look, I could see that the whole leader was dead and only the lateral branches lower on the trunk appear normal.
I'm not sure why the leader had died, and it was on someone's property so I couldn't examine it up close, but it's pretty clear that this tree should be removed. There is no way a conifer would come back from something like leader death all the way down the trunk.
In my last post, I talked about why I don't like pollarded trees- they're unattractive and do not serve a real purpose. While walking around Hollywood, I came across several trees like this one, which had been pollarded at some point in the past and then let grow. This creates a bizarre aesthetic of multiple small branches attached to large nobs halfway up the main branches.

These days, there is little reason to prune a tree like this unless you're living on some kind of homestead and you make your money weaving baskets. People use pollarding now to keep trees smaller than they otherwise would be. This problem could be much better addressed by planting an appropriately sized tree.
All of the branches where they attach to the trunk are attached at very narrow angles to the tree. Many of them also show signs of bark inclusion with other branches, which could indicate that they are likely to fail in the future.
This is a fairly young tree I found near PCC Cascade on Killingsworth. It has four equally sized branches emerging from the main trunk. This is not in its self a structural danger.
However, when this happens, it is a problem. This creased, folded look between two of the leaders indicates that bark is included in the branch attachment. This, combined with the very acute angle of the attachment, makes it quite likely to fail later in its life.
These conifers were planted probably because of their tall upright form, adding formality and framing the driveway well. Either the power lines were not there when the trees were planted, or no one thought of the trouble the trees would cause when they grew tall enough to interfere with the lines.
This Horse Chestnut is another great example of the wrong tree being in the wrong place. As you can see, a deep 'U' shape was cut into this tree when it was about two feet shorter, as the power lines now go directly through the center of the tree. This tree now not only looks bad, but has lost a good portion of its photosynthesizing machine (the leaves!). This also could have been avoided by paying attention to the utilities surrounding the tree and finding the truly best spot for your desired tree before planting.



In this close-up picture, you can see that these suckers have been pruned! Yes, pruned, as if they were separate trees! Especially on the main sucker, most of the little branches have been cut down to nubs.
