Sacha, : wrote:
On 4/2/06 17:14, in article
, "MikeW"
wrote:
penance, : wrote:
Not so, it is reasonable as long as the work carried out does not pose
a threat to the tree, this is assuming the tree is healthy and not a
threat to property or people.
There has been a precedence set in court for this (in the UK). I have
the reference in my college notes somewhere.
Thanks for all your replies
Had the councils arboriculturist (sp?) look at the tree,
For future reference apparently 30% is the most you can prune from a
largish Copper Beech with any hope of it surviving.
Just as a matter of interest, Mike, would you mind letting us know if your
neighbour accepts that
Sort of, we are going to do it in stages
The tree has a fork, the side that is nearest the neighbour I am going to
have pruned by 50%
And only thin the other fork, When the tree has recovered I will the then
reduce this by 50%
and if their request was prompted by their insurancecompany?
No, it was purely a request regarding light
I wonder where this leaves you and your tree?
The tree lives to fight another day, and I will spend many a happy hour
collecting its Leaves :-)
And it will hopefully see us all out.
(How long do Copper Beech live)
--
MW