A treescape forever altered
These crabapples in Johnson Park were among the survivors.
Many of you will smile at my ignorance—and I truly am ignorant about trees; I can barely tell them apart—but I learned a lot of disturbing and eye-opening facts about Western New York tree damage during a talk with a certified arborist yesterday.
It was interesting to hear him assert that previous lack of trimming had nothing to do with how the branches fell. He said some of his most regularly pruned trees were destroyed by the storm, and maintained that the amount of leaves on the trees and their positioning (east of a building being the worst) were the most crucial factors.
He says he’s most worried not about next spring (because the leaves gave up their nutrients before the storm hit) but about the following springs, when less branches and leaves on the trees will mean less food going to the roots, making them vulnerable to insects and disease.
To some degree he took a conservative position on the possible unnecessary removal of many trees, asserting that it does look much different when you’re in the bucket than from the ground. But I did get him to agree that the company most at fault had originally been hired to remove branches from power lines and had minimal professional standing as arborists. That’s pretty much what most of us think already, of course.
I feel like I want to learn more about trees. I’m certainly appreciating the ones left standing a lot more.
Comments
Without your name, I can't check into this much more, but you should directly email the publishers at info@buffaloheritage.com. Or call them at 716-903-7155.
Think of it like this:
A 200+ year old oak, it's boughs heavy during summer, even heavier in Fall due to rains, the boughs reaching a good two feet lower than usual due to those rains, gets hit with heavy snow. Where do the boughs go? Are they not affected since they haven't had proper trimming?
Of course they're affected. Proper pruning also alows for better growth patterns and relieves the tree of undo energy displacement to limbs that are unbalanced with the growth of the tree, itself.
The issue here is not how these trees can come back, but the damage done to their future growth patterning, as well. We have not been good stewards to these beasts.
But even without catastrophic storms, I agree it's important for the city to take care of its trees.
I'd contact my city councilor and raise the issue. Maybe you could network with the Garden Walk gardeners to lobby city government about this?