Anonymous wrote:I got an estimate of $3,000 for both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in an area along GW Parkway that has a lot of flooding & puddling up in backyards after rainstorms. Our yard, however never floods. A friend of ours who is an arborist said it is due to the four big trees in our yard. he said never take them out because they suck up lot of water and our backyard looks great.
Haha he's wrong . Trees don't prevent erosion as much as grass and proper perc beds. Sounds like he wants to keep his business going.
Anonymous wrote:We live in an area along GW Parkway that has a lot of flooding & puddling up in backyards after rainstorms. Our yard, however never floods. A friend of ours who is an arborist said it is due to the four big trees in our yard. he said never take them out because they suck up lot of water and our backyard looks great.
Anonymous wrote:This has the potential to be a helpful post.
I have old trees in my backyard as well, some of which lean heavily toward our house and lose the occasional branch in an ice or wind storm.
So the question is really one about the rational to remove them - how do I know if it is healthy enough of a tree to survive? The occasional fallen branch is okay, but how do I know if the entire tree could come crashing down on my house?[/quote]
I couldn't get this opinion from any arborist who came out, which I understand because of liability. I had one really big tree that was healthy, but leaned downhill and toward both my and my neighbor's houses. The best answer I got, or the one that finally helped me decide was that sometimes healthy trees get blown over and, if this one was, then there would be significant damage to our houses
Anonymous wrote:If you got a quote that low -- do it now. Run, do not walk. Get them out.