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General News    H4'ed 9/15/18

Top off your beer, not your tree!

By Jory Cuttitte  Posted by Jory Cuttitte (about the submitter)       (Page 1 of 2 pages)   2 comments

Jory Cuttitte
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Topping a tree is generally an outdated practice that can often times cause more harm than good. Because of the way trees heal their wounds, you create a situation where the wood then becomes exponentially more susceptible to a variety of structural and fungal ailments.

Topping is the process of removing the top portion of the tree, either for view clearing, line clearance, building clearance, or other cosmetic or safety purpose.

When you top a tree, you leave a large wound at the top. Because trees do not heal in the conventional sense (they compartmentalize -- meaning that they put on new wood to try and wall-off the exposed area, which can take years to complete), you end up putting the wound in a compromised state due to the quick onset of decay.

After the tree is topped, you are left with a compromised piece of wood which is susceptible to failure and decay -- and located at the top of the tree, which takes the brunt of heavier winds. Either the remaining branches at the new top begin to grow upwards towards the sun, become several tops, or the tree sprouts out multiple suckers that grow rapidly upwards. What you end up with are multiple epicormic (lacking a branch collar, which is a vital part of branch strength) "trees" growing out of the top of a now-compromised trunk.

It is important to note that topping trees is either a temporary fix, or a last resort -- but in the long run you are going to end up with a larger tree (not smaller, as topping is typically intended).

A general rule of thumb is; the faster a tree grows, the weaker the wood is. A good example of this, is the difference between a strong, slow growing Oak tree, as opposed to a fast growing, and weak Cottonwood tree. The same concept occurs in individual branches, regardless of species. Fast growth in a tree is weak growth, and trees put wood on at a much faster rate once they have been topped.

There are some situations where topping can make sense for certain trees and situations, as no two trees are the

same. Take fruit trees for instance -- sometimes it is important to keep small trees contained when there are no safety concerns. But when dealing with large, heavy mature trees, it can be detrimental and even a terminal diagnosis for tree health and safety.

Another example of potentially acceptable topping, is if you have a tree which is in striking distance of your home or property. If there is nothing to harm closer to the tree, we can remove the lower limbs and upper portion of the tree -- leaving a habitat snag for the birds and wildlife to enjoy.

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My name is Jory Cuttitte.
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