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Will this tree survive?

KrillBee

Golden Member
I am not sure if there are very many landscapers here, but today I had a relative that was helping me remove some small trees in my yard. He made a mistake and started to cut down a tree that I did not want him to remove. He was using a non-electric tree saw and cut about halfway into a tree that was 18 inches in diameter before I realized what was going on and yelled at him to stop.

Will this tree survive even though half of it has been cut into?
 
I am not sure if there are very many landscapers here, but today I had a relative that was helping me remove some small trees in my yard. He made a mistake and started to cut down a tree that I did not want him to remove. He was using a non-electric tree saw and cut about halfway into a tree that was 18 inches in diameter before I realized what was going on and yelled at him to stop.

Will this tree survive even though half of it has been cut into?

If you actually want that tree to survive, wrap and compress where you cut, just like on a human. It may die, but you also may be to save it.
 
If you actually want that tree to survive, wrap and compress where you cut, just like on a human. It may die, but you also may be to save it.

What I mean is you should keep air and bacteria from the cut, that's what kills trees. The best thing I can think of would(wood!) be an elastic wrap that goes around the cut and a few inches above and below. Trees are very hardy, limit the air and exposure of a cut and you can save it.
 
He cut through half an 18" diameter tree with a non-electric saw before you noticed? :awe:

willis-cutting-1358.jpg
 
http://www.dirtdoctor.com/organic/garden/view_question/id/59/

Tree Trunk Damage

"To treat any damage to tree trunks, splash on some hydrogen peroxide on the wounds, and then treat the wounds with Tree Trunk Goop. Formula: mix equal amounts of manure compost tea, natural diatomaceous earth and soft rock phosphate. Fireplace ashes can be added or used as a substitute for the phosphate. Reapply if rain or irrigation washes the material off."


http://www.uri.edu/ce/factsheets/sheets/treeinjury.html

"Wound Dressings: Wound dressings are not recommended for any tree wounds. Wound dressings actually have been found to increase decay. Wounds should be left exposed to the open air to seal naturally."

(how's that for contradictory advice?)


http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/consumer/factsheets/trees-new/text/damage_trunk.html


I'll be very surprised if you don't have to cut the tree down within a year. Cutting it half-way through has done a lot of damage to the tree's systems and it may not survive.
 
yea just leave it.
if its lucky and strong it will bridge the wound the living bit is thelayer under the bark. if it bridges it will have a clear path from root to the rest, if it doesn't its going to slowly die. hope its strong enough to fight off bugs that might invade....fertilize and water i guess.
 
My parents needed a small tree pulled from the front of their house. As I was ripping it from the ground, I could feel it's pain and agony. This tree was no longer just an inanimate object. I felt as if I had just slaughtered a living being.
 
http://www.dirtdoctor.com/organic/garden/view_question/id/59/

Tree Trunk Damage

"To treat any damage to tree trunks, splash on some hydrogen peroxide on the wounds, and then treat the wounds with Tree Trunk Goop. Formula: mix equal amounts of manure compost tea, natural diatomaceous earth and soft rock phosphate. Fireplace ashes can be added or used as a substitute for the phosphate. Reapply if rain or irrigation washes the material off."


http://www.uri.edu/ce/factsheets/sheets/treeinjury.html

"Wound Dressings: Wound dressings are not recommended for any tree wounds. Wound dressings actually have been found to increase decay. Wounds should be left exposed to the open air to seal naturally."

(how's that for contradictory advice?)


http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/depts/hort/consumer/factsheets/trees-new/text/damage_trunk.html


I'll be very surprised if you don't have to cut the tree down within a year. Cutting it half-way through has done a lot of damage to the tree's systems and it may not survive.

They aren't necessarily contradictory. I think the wound dressing they're talking about are those tarry spreads people used to put on severed limbs. I'm not sure about the stuff in your first link, but it looks like it would kill bacteria, and encourage scarring through natural tree growth.
 
If that tree is within falling distance of anything of value, take it down. All trees die someday or the wind takes them, and that tree is compromised.
 
If that tree is within falling distance of anything of value, take it down. All trees die someday or the wind takes them, and that tree is compromised.

This. If a gust of wind or a thunderstorm comes through, that tree is coming down for sure.
 
I had a neighbor cut down a tree once, and they didn't remove the stump. Not long after, leaves and new branches started growing from the stump.
 
I'd be more concerned that it is going to fall over now that it has been cut halfway through. A strong wind would probably be enough to blow it over.
 
It will probably survive, but you should have immediately sealed the wound with tree sealer. It will probably die within a few years due to fungi. Then again, it may not. If the wound is the width of a saw blade, it might be able to heal itself before any fungus gets established. Definitely dicey though.

What kind of tree is it?
 
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Most likely, the tree won't die, at least not immediately (within 2 to 3 years.) Also, the face cut shouldn't be much more than 1/3 of the way into the tree (else the guy is a noob at felling trees).

Regardless though, even 1/3 of the way into an 18" dia tree is quite a bit of open space inside the trunk. And, that sort of wound to a tree is going to take quite a while to heal over (if ever), while still leaving a hollow space inside the tree. For safety's sake, I think I'd remove the tree & replace it. If the cut were only 1 or 2 inches deep, I think I'd hope for the best. But 1/3 of the way is too far (imho).

If you have wood of the same species and can cut off a couple of wedges that would be tight in the saw's kerf, it might help to pound them in, trying to line up the outer bark & layer just under the bark with that of the tree, and keeping it pretty tight when you insert it.
 
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