Hey All,
I am looking for advice from the experts. I have several trees that I think are dead or dieing. My guess is that they couldn't handle the drought conditions over the past couple years.
Here are some details and my estimates on the sizes. I can post pictures if that helps at all. I am wondering if there is any chance that some of these are not dead, but "hibernating" from the drought. Any chance of these types of trees going through periods of slowed/stopped growth and then returning to life? eusa_prayPlease say yes, as I don't want to lose all of them :no. Should I wait until next spring to see what happens?
Small oak tree (6-8 inch diameter base, 20ft tall) - this one looks bad, lost it's leaves mid-summer, bark is peeling off. Pretty confident this one is toast. Easy enough to turn into firewood unless there is interest in some small turning blanks.
Med sized oak (14-16 inch diameter base, 40ft+ tall) - this one showed no new growth this spring and bark is starting to peel. Again I assume it's toast. Not sue it this is big enough to dice up for lumber by itself (maybe if I have another tree to cut at the same time). Would this be of interest for the turners?
Large Tulip Poplar (18+ inch diameter base, 50-60ft tall) - started loosing leaves late summer. This one is close to the house and I wouldn't be comfortable touching it myself. Assuming it would be big $$$ to have it removed if it is dead. Any chance it is just hibernating?
Large Oak (24+ inch diameter base, 50-60ft tall) - started loosing leaves a couple months ago. Another big one that I would hate to lose. Any chance of it coming back to life? If it is dead, I think I may have it cut into lumber. Maybe all quarter sawn this time. :eusa_thin
BTW, I don't consider any of these to be yard trees. My place is only ~ 3yrs old and prior to that it was a naturally wooded area. Obviously there are no guarantees, but the oak that I had diced up didn't have any foreign objects in it, and I would expect the same from these.
Any advice is appreciated!
Thanks,
Dave
I am looking for advice from the experts. I have several trees that I think are dead or dieing. My guess is that they couldn't handle the drought conditions over the past couple years.
Here are some details and my estimates on the sizes. I can post pictures if that helps at all. I am wondering if there is any chance that some of these are not dead, but "hibernating" from the drought. Any chance of these types of trees going through periods of slowed/stopped growth and then returning to life? eusa_prayPlease say yes, as I don't want to lose all of them :no. Should I wait until next spring to see what happens?
Small oak tree (6-8 inch diameter base, 20ft tall) - this one looks bad, lost it's leaves mid-summer, bark is peeling off. Pretty confident this one is toast. Easy enough to turn into firewood unless there is interest in some small turning blanks.
Med sized oak (14-16 inch diameter base, 40ft+ tall) - this one showed no new growth this spring and bark is starting to peel. Again I assume it's toast. Not sue it this is big enough to dice up for lumber by itself (maybe if I have another tree to cut at the same time). Would this be of interest for the turners?
Large Tulip Poplar (18+ inch diameter base, 50-60ft tall) - started loosing leaves late summer. This one is close to the house and I wouldn't be comfortable touching it myself. Assuming it would be big $$$ to have it removed if it is dead. Any chance it is just hibernating?
Large Oak (24+ inch diameter base, 50-60ft tall) - started loosing leaves a couple months ago. Another big one that I would hate to lose. Any chance of it coming back to life? If it is dead, I think I may have it cut into lumber. Maybe all quarter sawn this time. :eusa_thin
BTW, I don't consider any of these to be yard trees. My place is only ~ 3yrs old and prior to that it was a naturally wooded area. Obviously there are no guarantees, but the oak that I had diced up didn't have any foreign objects in it, and I would expect the same from these.
Any advice is appreciated!
Thanks,
Dave