Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We are slowly removing the larger trees, and replanting replacement trees further away from the houses in our mature larger yard.
People who planted these trees, even as late as the 1980s, had no idea what kind of storms we would regularly have now.
As if they didn't have these storms back then, you all make it sound like Earth was paradise with perfect weather until climate change slipped into the headlines. There were hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanoes, floods, and fires before humans.
Sure, but not as often here. I'm in my 50s and my parents (who were in their 90s before they died) noticed storms were getting worse.
My parents also cut down mature trees when they reached a certain height and replanted, and were the only house in their block not damaged by a hurricane a decade or so ago in another area of the southeast. Dad remembered the awful storms of the 1930s and 1950s, and we are now due for some more.
My dh and I got a decent deal on our house in a neighborhood with lots of mature trees post derecho. Most people younger than we are didn't have the $$$ necessary to maintain all the trees or cut and replant. It takes funds to take care of trees, they are like giant shrubs.
We are planting mature trees, but further from our house and our neighbors houses.
You either learn from history or you don't, that is up to you.