Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad spends at least a couple thousand each year getting trees removed from his acre lot. I only have 1/2 an acre and back to parkland - remove the trees.
It's cheaper to remove them before they fall and hit something. With the wind earlier this week we had another tree split. I'm still waiting for the county to fix some trees that snapped with the duracho that will fall on my house when they start to rot (but I have my figers crossed that they will land on my 30 year old screened in porch - and we'll fix that project with an upgrade!)
Wow, how trashy of you to expect the taxpayers to "upgrade" you white trash screen porch. I work for the county, I will let them know.
Anonymous wrote:My dad spends at least a couple thousand each year getting trees removed from his acre lot. I only have 1/2 an acre and back to parkland - remove the trees.
It's cheaper to remove them before they fall and hit something. With the wind earlier this week we had another tree split. I'm still waiting for the county to fix some trees that snapped with the duracho that will fall on my house when they start to rot (but I have my figers crossed that they will land on my 30 year old screened in porch - and we'll fix that project with an upgrade!)
Anonymous wrote:I love trees, but even a healthy tree can fall in a really bad storm. Our neighbor's 60-foot oak tree fell on our house during the derecho of 2012 - they had no reason to believe it wasn't healthy, and it certainly had looked healthy. It did a lot of damage, most of which was covered by insurance. (though I had to go out of pocket for a few very expensive things, and my daughter and I both could have been killed.)
You can't control for everything, and you definitely don't want to remove all your trees, but I can see some value in taking out a couple that are nearest the house and leaning in that direction.