Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy...

97
Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, [email protected]

Transcript of Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy...

Page 1: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools

Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, [email protected]

Page 2: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 3: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 4: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 5: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 6: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 7: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 8: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 9: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 10: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning improves stability

Reduction pruning reduces trunk bend in high winds.

Not pruned

Reduced by pruning

Page 11: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Proactive Pruning: young trees

• Set the objectives: health, safety, longevity

• Frequency? (pruning cycle)

• Inspect structure—forks!

• Locate permanent branches• Keep temporary branches as

long as they are needed

Page 12: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Over-raising = Giraffe Pruning

Select and train lowest permanent branches.

Keep temporary branches as long as they are needed!

Page 13: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Poor form Good form

Principles of strong structure:• One (or more)dominant trunks• Strong branch unions• Balanced crown

Page 14: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Mitigate structural issues: avoid failure

• Codominant stems: stems of equal size originating from the same point on the tree

• Included bark: bark pinched between two stems = weakness in the union

• Unbalanced crown:one side heavier = asymmetric heavy ends = overextended Large low branches:

Page 15: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Collar

Strong connection: Subdominant

Page 16: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Weak connection: bark inclusion, codominants

Page 17: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

ANSI Z60 NURSERY STANDARD:

1.3.2 Minimum quality requirement All nursery stock transacted within the terms of the Standard shall, at time of shipment, be substantially free of damaging insects and diseases, in good living condition, and typical in habit for the species in the region of the country in which it is grown.1.3.3 Co-dominant stems - Type 1 and Type 2 shade trees Unless specified as multi-stem trees (see Section 1.2,

above), Type 1 and Type 2 shade trees (see Section 2) with co-dominant stems occurring within the lower half of the crown do not meet the minimum quality requirement set forth in Section 1.3.2 (see Figure 6, below).

Page 18: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

1.4.3 Lowest branch height for street trees Bid specifications for trees to be used as street trees shall include the minimum height of the

lowest branch, or the height to which the trunk shall be free of branches, which shall bear a relationship to the size and kind of tree so that the crown of the tree is in good balance with the trunk. Examples: Acer platanoides, 2 in. cal., 12 to 14 ft., trunk free of branches 6 ft. Quercus rubra 3½ in. cal., 14 to 16 ft., lowest branch 7 ft.

Soil above the root flare, from being deeply planted in the nursery as a young plant, as a result of maintenance practices in the nursery, or added during

harvest, shall not be included in ball depth measurement, and should be removed.

Page 19: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Tearout failures of codominants with included bark

Page 20: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Split failure due to bark inclusion

Page 21: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Unbalanced canopy

Liontailing: trees with overextended branches after inner branches were removed.• Susceptible to breakage• Restoring requires ‘stubs’•Large trunk wound will decay the attachment point

Page 22: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Liontailed trees failed

Page 23: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

No laterals to cut back to after damage

Page 24: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Large lower limb will be removed for 14’ clearance.

Overpruning: small limbs removed instead

of reduced

8

Page 25: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Big cuts can result in decay and cracks and sunscald and imbalance and starvation and loss of contributions and...

Page 26: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Structural Pruning Strategies:1. Develop or maintain dominant leader(s)

2. Identify lowest permanent branches

3. Reduce temporary branches below the permanent crown to build and protect trunk, nourish roots

4. Space scaffold branches along dominant trunk(s)

5. Keep all branches ~< ½ trunk diameter

6. Subordinate codominants with included bark

Trees require about 25 years of training to develop strong

structure.

Objective: Promote strong structure

Page 27: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Trace included bark to inosculate(From an “innie” to an “outie”)

Page 28: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

14 months later: re-clean

Page 29: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

1 year later: Fini! From included bark to a bark ridge in 2 seasons.

Page 30: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Preventive Pruning: young trees

• Set the objectives: health, safety…

• Frequency and amount (cycle and dose)

• Prioritize structure• Locate permanent branches• Keep temporary branches

as long as they are needed

Page 31: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning cycle: the time between each pruning event

• Depends on quality of nursery stock, growth rate, climate, species, availability of technicians.

• Shorter for faster-growing or defective trees.

• “Longer cycles force larger cuts to correct structural issues”: ??Theory, or fact?? This can be mitigated by avoiding horizontal cuts. Extrapolating research on small trees to the care of big trees does NOT work!

Page 32: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 33: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 34: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 35: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Determine a pruning cycle

Pruning cycle: (very generally)- more than 3-5 years = higher pruning dose- every 1-2 years = smaller pruning dose

Suggested program:

- At planting: Despite the myth to avoid this!- Year two or three- Year five or six- Year ten- Year fifteen

Page 36: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning dose: the amount of live tissue removed at one pruning

• Depends on customer expectations, the size of the stems, and the pruning cycle.

Low pruning dose( < than 20%)

Higher pruning dose( > than 20%)

Mature or recently planted trees

(Veterans: <10%)

Young, established trees

(or even at planting time)

Cooler climates with short growing season

Warm climates where trees have longer growing season

Decay prone species Good compartmentalizers

Page 37: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Appropriate Pruning Dose for Specific Applications

Large Pruning Dose Small Pruning Dose

Municipality with no money or volunteers available.

Residences, commercial properties

Long pruning cycle Short pruning cycle

Aesthetics of less concern Aesthetics are a concern

Effects on the Tree from Applying Pruning Doses

Large Pruning Dose Small Pruning Dose

Larger pruning wounds Smaller pruning wounds

Larger void in canopy Smaller void in canopy

Greatly encourages growth in unpruned portions of tree

Encourages some growth in unpruned portions of the tree

Page 38: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Impact of pruning dose on co-dominant stem growth

before after 75% dose

Page 39: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Impact of pruning dose on co-dominant stem growth

Foliage removed for 75% dose

Page 40: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 41: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 42: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Maximum critical diameter: the largest diameter pruning cut you are willing to make on a certain species

• This limit should be specified in advance

• Should be smaller for decay-prone species.

• Is controlled by the pruning cycle *and angle: horizontal cuts should be smaller*

• The amount of heartwood or growth rings exposed

Page 43: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Branch size: - proportion relative to trunk - actual diameter of stem

Branch size Consequences of Removal

Recommended Action

Less than ½ trunk diameter

Few consequences Remove if needed

1/3 to ½ trunk diameter

Some trunk defects could result

Consider shortening instead

More than ½ trunk diameter

Defects likely Reduce instead of removing

Large enough to have heartwood

Defects likely Reduce instead of removing

Page 44: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Proactive Pruning: young trees

• Set the objectives: health, safety…

• Frequency and amount (cycle and dose)

• Prioritize structure• Locate permanent branches• Keep temporary branches

as long as they are needed

Page 45: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Make good cuts

Step Shorten the branch to get the weight off. When using a saw, undercut first. **Image wrong: 2nd cut should align with the first**

Step 2Pull away the cut section.

Step 3Remove the stub, outside the wrinkles. Do not cut flush against the trunk. Leave the collar intact.

Page 46: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Branch bark ridge

Collar: swollen area at the base of the branch where it joins the trunk. The wood is denser and rich in energy reserves and defensive chemicals. These same qualities exist at all growth points (nodes, forks). Good pruning cuts are made where diameter (taper) narrows.

Collar

Page 47: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Bad- flush cut

Wound wood does not develop evenly.

Page 48: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 49: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 50: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Obsolete Illustration

of Reduction Cut

Too big a woundToo close to another wound

Reduce further out!

Page 51: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Prioritize:Structural pruning not as important on these

Page 52: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Temporary vs. permanent branch management

14’

8’

0’-8’

Page 53: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 54: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 55: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 56: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 57: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

A Hook is Handy

Pull down branch to stabilize and position for precise cutting

Pull out webworms, balloons, cats…

Page 58: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 59: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 60: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 61: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 62: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 63: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 64: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 65: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 66: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 67: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 68: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 69: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning Plan: First 5 years

Identify architectural type and select leader(s)

Do not remove more than 35% of live foliage at a pruning visit.

Reduce all branches greater than ½ trunk diameter.

Reduce or remove all branches or stems competing with the one(s) selected to be the leader.

Reduce or remove large, low vigorous branches and broken, cracked, and damaged branches.

Page 70: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Reduce growth rate of low aggressive branches

Push Push

Page 71: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before After

Year two

Pushback

Page 72: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

AfterBeforeStructural pruning is a three

step process:

1. Identify the stem(s) that will make the best leader(s).

2. Identify which stems are competing with the leaders.

3. Decide where to shorten these competing stems.

Page 73: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

AfterBefore

Page 74: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning Plan: 5 – 20 years

Do not remove more than 25-35% of live foliage.

Reduce all branches greater than ½ trunk diameter.

Identify lowest scaffold limbs of the permanent canopy and reduce all aggressive lower branches.

Reduce branches with included bark.

Reduce or remove competing leaders (if there are more than 3 competing leaders, this can be done in stages).

Reduce branches within 18’’ of largest limbs.

Page 75: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before After

Push

Page 76: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Two years later

Before after

Page 77: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before After

Page 78: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Dominant leader structure after two

pruning visits

Page 79: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before pruning After pruning

Transforming a bush into a tree

Page 80: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Two years later

Page 81: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning Plan: 20 – 30 years

Identify 5 to 10 permanent scaffold limbs and reduce branches within 18-36’’ to avoid clustered branches.

Space permanent scaffold limbs to reduce wind resistance.

Remove many or all of the branches below the first permanent limb.

Reduce codominants with included bark.

Reduce and/or remove competing leaders.

Page 82: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Pruning at planting time and 10 years later built good form. In the mature tree, a stable skeleton of scaffolds are developed.The left image shows large uprights removed, which makes the ends heavier and the branch more likely to fail. Another way to subordinate large limbsIs to remove downright laterals, and reduce or retain uprights.

Page 83: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Reduce growth on branches below permanent

canopy

Page 84: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

2 years later After

Page 85: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

before after

Page 86: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 87: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Here is a tree that was damaged in a storm. As a result, many stems are growing upright

Page 88: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Remove two upright, interior stems

Page 89: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 90: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 91: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 92: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.
Page 93: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

After removing right codominant stem

Before

Page 94: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before - year 8

After

Debris

Page 95: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before - year 8

After

Debris

One year after pruning

Page 96: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

Before - year 8One year after pruning

18 months after pruning

Page 97: Pruning Young Street Trees, Using Pole Tools Dr. Ed Gilman and Traci Jo Partin, adapted by Guy Meilleur, Guy@HistoricTreeCare.com.

With dedication to a management plan, your community can become a model for others