UC farm advisor reminds readers to check for hazardous trees
Cooler, breezy weather in California this week is a welcome sign of autumn. After three years of drought, the beginning of fall holds hope for a "normal" rainy season. Since the hoped-for stormy weather can release branches from trees, UC Cooperative Extension horticulture advisor Michelle LeStrange reminded readers in her Visalia Times-Delta column today to take a close look at their landscape trees.
"It’s better to find a broken branch in your tree," she wrote, "than on your car."
She suggests trees be inspected before and after storms for leaning, weakly attached multiple trunks, a split where large branches attach to the trunk, cavities or decay (mushrooms on the tree or roots can be a sign), cracks, broken and dead branches.
LeStrange, the Master Gardener advisor for Tulare County, pointed out a photographic guide produced by UC Cooperative Extension titled “Recognizing Tree Hazards,” which is available at UCCE offices for $4 and free on the Web.
Hazardous-tree.