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Star Trek Card Geek 21-03-2003 02:32 PM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea
of land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to
actually ENJOY it ;)

Ian 22-03-2003 12:44 AM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea
of land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to
actually ENJOY it ;)


Fifty feet should be lots of space b/t. I have a willow about 30-40
feet away and no signs of roots at all.

Ian

animaux 22-03-2003 02:20 AM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
On 21 Mar 2003 16:37:15 -0800, (Ian) wrote:

I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea
of land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to
actually ENJOY it ;)


Fifty feet should be lots of space b/t. I have a willow about 30-40
feet away and no signs of roots at all.

Ian


Yet.

Fred Garvin 23-03-2003 12:32 AM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 09:33:50 -0500, Star Trek Card Geek wrote:

I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea of
land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to actually
ENJOY it ;)



DON'T DO IT. Willows are the worst tree on the planet. Messy, roots
destroy everything regardless of how far away. I just had 2 60 footers
taken down 2 years ago because a tornado just missed the house and I had
10 inch branches twisted off as a result. Plant something else, seriously.
You'll regret it mark my words.

Kevin Miller 23-03-2003 01:08 AM

Willow Trees and Wells
 

I HATE mine... I've already raked those twigs 4 times and it isn't
even April yet...

The work makes the tree less 'pretty' to me actually


On 21 Mar 2003 06:33:50 -0800, (Star Trek Card Geek)
wrote:

I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea
of land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to
actually ENJOY it ;)



B & J 23-03-2003 06:08 AM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
"Fred Garvin" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 21 Mar 2003 09:33:50 -0500, Star Trek Card Geek wrote:

I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea of
land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to actually
ENJOY it ;)



DON'T DO IT.


There are two redeeming features of willows that I appreciate. The first is
that the two huge willows we had in our yard were great climbing places for
kids. The second was that the ends of their branches were ideal nest sites
for orioles. Beyond that, they were labor intensive. Each spring we cleaned
up piles of twigs under them, and heaven help us if we had a major storm
during the summer. Hauling away broken off branches by the trailer load was
the result, providing the storm didn't break off huge sections that had to
be cut and hauled away. They're pretty trees with great shade but just not
worth the trouble they cause.

John



Beecrofter 23-03-2003 02:08 PM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
(Star Trek Card Geek) wrote in message . com...
I am ADDICTED to the idea of a Willow Tree in my yard. Is there a safe
distance from the well a WT can go and not invade it? We have 7 acrea
of land to play with, but obvioulsy not all 7 would allow me to
actually ENJOY it ;)


Willow trees are not for the anal
If you have the Biff and Muffin putting green lawn choose another
species.
That said I would be more concerned about sewer lines than the well
because roots can invade and clog most varieties of sewer piping and
the force a root can produce is simply astounding.
2x a mature tree's height is a generally safe distance for it's roots
to stay inside but for a sewer line I would err towards 3x.
If there is another sourcer of water on the property then all the
better, willow never looks better than overhanging a pond and being
reflected.

Ian 26-03-2003 06:08 PM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
The best part about the willow trees is the explosive foraging
activity by honey bees in the early spring collecting pollen. If you
apperciate honeybees, then you will love this tree...

Ian

Star Trek Card Geek 27-03-2003 10:08 PM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
Having willows as a kid, I know I spent all my summers up in their
branches :) As our yard is more rual and less cultivated, I'm not as
worried aoub the twigs and such. The sewer lines are on the opposite
side of the house then where I'm consdiering planting one, so my only
worry is the well. I can easily move further away from that even, but
then lose the benefit of seeing it form the house. I SO wish we had a
pond as that would look grand!

M. Tiefert 28-03-2003 12:20 AM

Willow Trees and Wells
 
In article , (Star Trek Card Geek) wrote:
Having willows as a kid, I know I spent all my summers up in their
branches :) As our yard is more rual and less cultivated, I'm not as
worried aoub the twigs and such. The sewer lines are on the opposite
side of the house then where I'm consdiering planting one, so my only
worry is the well. I can easily move further away from that even, but
then lose the benefit of seeing it form the house. I SO wish we had a
pond as that would look grand!


What about the leach field for your septic system - you certainly don't
want that to get clogged with roots either. Very yucky!

cheers,

Marj

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