GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   Lawns (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/lawns/)
-   -   Large pines with dead lower branches (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/lawns/100777-large-pines-dead-lower-branches.html)

31-07-2005 08:04 PM

Large pines with dead lower branches
 
I have a row a pines (blue spruce & ?) along one properly line that are
30'-40' tall. Most of the lower branches are dead, I assume because they
are no longer getting any light because the upper branches. Is it ok to
remove these branches so that the trunk is clean up to about 5 feet from the
ground? I'm thinking about doing that and then planting pachysandra or some
other shade-loving ground cover underneath. They run right along side the
deck and the brown, needleless sections are ugly.



LM 01-08-2005 01:08 AM


wrote in message news:Tg9He.1948$va1.1274@trndny09...
I have a row a pines (blue spruce & ?) along one properly line that are
30'-40' tall. Most of the lower branches are dead, I assume because they
are no longer getting any light because the upper branches. Is it ok to
remove these branches so that the trunk is clean up to about 5 feet from

the
ground?


Yes - we trim our evergreens ( cedar,hemlock, fir & spruce) all the time.
The deer also trim them if we don't.



John Crichton 01-08-2005 04:40 AM

What part of the country are you in?

wrote:

I have a row a pines (blue spruce & ?) along one properly line that are
30'-40' tall. Most of the lower branches are dead, I assume because they
are no longer getting any light because the upper branches. Is it ok to
remove these branches so that the trunk is clean up to about 5 feet from the
ground? I'm thinking about doing that and then planting pachysandra or some
other shade-loving ground cover underneath. They run right along side the
deck and the brown, needleless sections are ugly.



Joe Zorzin 02-08-2005 11:58 AM


You can, if you have a need, also trim live branches. Most conifers will not
suffer at all with as little as a third of the stem with live branches, as
that's what happens in the forest.
--
*************
Joe
Licensed Forester in Massachusetts

wrote in message news:Tg9He.1948$va1.1274@trndny09...
I have a row a pines (blue spruce & ?) along one properly line that are
30'-40' tall. Most of the lower branches are dead, I assume because they
are no longer getting any light because the upper branches. Is it ok to
remove these branches so that the trunk is clean up to about 5 feet from

the
ground? I'm thinking about doing that and then planting pachysandra or

some
other shade-loving ground cover underneath. They run right along side the
deck and the brown, needleless sections are ugly.





dicko 02-08-2005 01:04 PM

On Tue, 2 Aug 2005 06:58:53 -0400, "Joe Zorzin" wrote:


You can, if you have a need, also trim live branches. Most conifers will not
suffer at all with as little as a third of the stem with live branches, as
that's what happens in the forest.


I have a Blue Spruce that has grown tall enough to have its lower
branches impinging into the airspace of my driveway. Every time I
prune one of them back, the branch dies.

Is there a right and wrong way to prune a Blue Spruce?

dickm


Romy Beeck 02-08-2005 02:43 PM


"dicko" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 2 Aug 2005 06:58:53 -0400, "Joe Zorzin" wrote:


You can, if you have a need, also trim live branches. Most conifers will
not
suffer at all with as little as a third of the stem with live branches, as
that's what happens in the forest.


I have a Blue Spruce that has grown tall enough to have its lower
branches impinging into the airspace of my driveway. Every time I
prune one of them back, the branch dies.

Is there a right and wrong way to prune a Blue Spruce?

dickm

Icut off all the branches on my blue spruce about 7ft from the ground so can
walk right under the tree
and have no problem. It looks nice and no mess under the tree. It is a very
large tree and about 50yrs old.




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:53 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter