Tree Removal Lancaster Pa
Douglas Tree service removing a tree in Manheim Pa with a crane.
By: DouglasTreeService Lancaster
See the rest here:
Tree Removal Lancaster Pa - Video
Tree Removal Lancaster Pa
Douglas Tree service removing a tree in Manheim Pa with a crane.
By: DouglasTreeService Lancaster
See the rest here:
Tree Removal Lancaster Pa - Video
24 Hr Emergency Tree Removal Santa Rosa CA Call (707)-206-7714
24 Hr Emergency Tree Removal Santa Rosa CA Call (707)-206-7714 24 hours a day 7 days a week, http://youtu.be/9I-vyxKvhhk.
By: Desmond Owens
Read the original here:
24 Hr Emergency Tree Removal Santa Rosa CA Call (707)-206-7714 - Video
Tree removal vancouver Washington
Tree removal vancouver Washington.
By: ALPHA TREE CARE LLC
Originally posted here:
Tree removal vancouver Washington - Video
DEBRIS FROM TREE REMOVALwon't be collected in weekly residential garbage pickup in unincorporated Polk County; that has caused disputes between residents and county officials.
BARTOW | Here's a tip for anyone trying to dispose of yard waste in unincorporated Polk County.
If you put out leaves and brush, they'll be gone on garbage day.
If you put out logs, they won't.
The current garbage contract differentiates between yard trash, which includes shrub and tree trimmings and grass clippings, and land-clearing debris, which includes tree trunks, limbs and stumps.
"The contract has definitions," said Ana Wood, Polk's director of waste and recycling.
But somehow that message hasn't gotten through to some of Polk County's 138,000 residential garbage customers, and complaints and misunderstandings persist, Wood said.
Wood acknowledges that county officials themselves are partly to blame for the misunderstanding.
From 1999 to 2005, Polk had written guidelines for yard trash that contained specific size restrictions.
Those restrictions said material couldn't be more than 5 feet long or 5 inches wide.
Go here to read the rest:
Trash Dispute: Complaints Made Over Tree Trunk Removal
Kirklands consulting arborist Scott Baker prepares a rope for a tree test he conducted in May 2014. Kirklands contractor, Marshbank Construction, will be removing all but nine of Park Lanes existing trees. Most of the ones that will remain are at the streets Main Street and Lake Street gateways.
image credit: Christian Knight/City of Kirkland
During the past 12 months, the Park Lane project team has been working with residents and business owners to redesign Park Lane into a greener, more walkable and vibrant corridor. Park Lanes new plaza-style street will feature a one-level surface of brick pavers and a new stormwater system that will better protect Lake Washington from the pollutants that drain to it every time it rains.
Starting Jan. 5, Kirklands contractor, Marshbank Construction, will begin working on that new vision. This will involve some dramatic changes, such as closing the street to automobile traffic and progressively removing all of the existing sidewalk and pavement.
One of the most visible changes will be to Park Lanes treescape. The contractor will be removing all but nine of Park Lanes existing trees.
Some of them are diseased, said Project Engineer Frank Reinart. Most of them are old and some of them are in the way of new utilities. But the underlying reason we are replacing the trees is to make Park Lane more walkable and accessible for pedestrians of all abilities. The current conditions of the trees make it hard for people, in groups or with assistance, to walk the length of Park Lane.
Reinart points to the maple in front of Cactus Restaurant. That trees base and root mass protrude above the sidewalks surface, reducing to a couple feet the walkable space between the base of the tree and the street on one side, and Cactus fenced dining area on the other side.
A wheelchair cant fit through that space, he said. A person walking with a child might be forced to step into the street. And this is only one such example on Park Lane.
Pedestrian access is the primary reason for removing many of the trees. But other reasons exist. The maples in front of Zeeks Pizza and Cactus, for example, are aging. The maple on the northwest corner of Main Street and Park Lane conflicts directly with the projects replacement water main. Ten more treesmost of them mapleswould not survive the root damage they would sustain while crews build the streets new underground utilities and its walking surface.
Altogether, the project will remove 27 trees, including an ailing oak removed earlier this year. It will plant 35 new trees with five different species be planted. Those species include the more familiar Red Maples and Red Oaks, as well as the tall and slender Musashinos and the broader Redspire Pears and Pink Flair Cherries.
Original post:
Tree replacement on Park Lane in Kirkland begins with tree removal
Sporre tree removal service in Wesport CT 06880 2014
Removing large tree with crane in Westport CT.
By: Ian Sporre
See the original post here:
Sporre tree removal service in Wesport CT 06880 2014 - Video
White Rock Coun. Helen Fathers speaks at the Dec. 15 council meeting.
image credit: Sarah Massah photo
White Rock tree-preservation proponents can breathe easier, after city leaders voted last week to approve bylaw amendments that would require all residents to apply for a permit before taking down a tree.
However, not all councillors were in favour of the amendments, which put a moratorium on tree removal in the city until a 20-year Urban Forest Management Plan for future tree removal on private and public lands receives public consultation in the new year.
Coun. Megan Knight, who voted against the amendments Thursday evening at a special council meeting, said that her concerns focused on the timeline of the amendments.
She noted that the turnaround was quick and that residents should have more time and transparency before the amendments went through.
By a 4-3 vote, council voted to amend its tree-management bylaw, 1831, to include protected trees within the municipal boundaries of the City of White Rock in place of designated areas as per a map.
According to the bylaw, protected trees include those that have a trunk diameter at breast height (DBH) greater than 30 centimetres, or has a combined DBH of its three largest trunks greater than 30 centimetres.
According to Coun. Helen Fathers, prior to the amendments, neighbours could have different rules for removing trees.
You and I could live on the same street and you could live on the east side and I would live on the west side of the street, and you would have to apply for a permit and I can just do what I like, she explained.
Here is the original post:
Tree-cutting rules branch out in White Rock
NEW MARKET The Shenandoah Valley Battlefield Foundation has expedited the removal of ash trees as part of the restoration of the Third Winchester battlefield.
The foundation says the move was prompted by the damage being done by an emerald ash borer infestation. Dan Reinhart, the foundations resource management specialist, says theres concern that the invasive insect could spread and become a safety risk to battlefield visitors.
The foundation will use salvageable wood to build additional fencing as well as sell some lumber from the downed trees to help offset the costs of the project.
Work will begin in January and is expected to be completed within three months.
2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
See the original post here:
Tree removal expedited at Shenandoah Valley battlefield to combat insect infestation
James Bruggers, jbruggers@courier-journal.com 9:13 a.m. EST December 24, 2014
The State cites safety as a concern because of the distance the trees Tafel planted are from the roadway. A distance of at least 6 feet. "There are hundreds of telephone poles and other trees planted around the city that are closer to the roadway than these trees," Tafel said. Tafel has been given thiry days to remove the trees, or the State Highway Dept. will remove them and charge Tafel for the labor. Dec. 1, 2014(Photo: Alton Strupp/The Courier-Journal)
The state highway department has agreed to delay the removal of 17 trees that were planted along Brownsboro Road without permit.
A temporary reprieve was granted after a lawyer representing the City of Rolling Fields asked for more time to resolve the matter.
"We are honoring their request for an additional month," said Matt Bullock, the chief engineer for the Kentucky Department of Highways District 5.
"The City needs a bit of time to try and find an informal solution," Rolling Fields attorney John Singler wrote to Bullock on Dec. 12. "It would be most appreciated if you could hold off the chainsaws for a month to allow us to get together and see if some kind of mutually agreeable solution can be found."
COURIER-JOURNAL
Lawyer asks Kentucky to "hold off the chainsaws"
The trees were planted earlier this year after road construction had forced the removal of a number of shade trees. State officials said the trees will grow too big, will become a threat to motorists and increase road maintenance costs.
State officials have said any object including trees placed in a right of way of a state road needs an encroachment permit, and that Kentucky officials seek to preserve a "clear zone" to limit dangers to motorists. No trees can be planted in a clear zone with trunks wider than four inches in diameter at maturity, they said.
Go here to read the rest:
Kentucky delays Brownsboro Road tree removal
SERVSQUAD Tree Service Nationwide Tree Removal 1-844-365-7378 Storm Cleanup
SERVSQUAD onsite of a tree removal job showing one of our tree climbers walking on a limb for a technical tree take down. SERVSQUAD specializes in hazardous,...
By: Servsquad
See more here:
SERVSQUAD Tree Service Nationwide Tree Removal 1-844-365-7378 Storm Cleanup - Video