- May 23, 2015
- 25,708
- Pool Size
- 16000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-60
Once you get the tree taken care of, you can go around the neighborhood to offer your expert chainsaw services.
Just don't carry the chainsaw with you on the first visit.
And don't wear the William Shatner mask.
No, no, no, you are looking at this all wrong! This is when you tell yourself (and the IRS) "I am an entrepreneur"! This is a deductible business expense! Those arn't just trees on the ground son, they are opportunity laying at your feet! You and your largest child can go around cutting and hauling the pre-harvested bounty and bundling it to sell as smoker wood. You'd be making money out of both ends and teaching your child valuable life lessons!I like playing with chainsaws as much as the next guy but the wife says I have to wait until the end of the month when the life insurance gets paid … hmmmm
I actually have a H/O insurance claim started for some other damage so I’m going to get estimates and see what my insurer is willing to cover. If they don’t want to cover “skilled arborist fees” then perhaps “shiny new 91cc MS661 Magnum Stihl chainsaw ” will be considered a covetable expense ….
Nice house Matt.![]()
Nunzio... Had lots of Italian friends growing up. I have forgotten everything that they said if it had the word concrete in the sentence!“So many of life’s problems can be solved with a chainsaw …”
My grandpa Nunzio said that a lot … and something about concrete but I forgot what exactly![]()
My son passed away at school and the school planted one of these in his memory. It wasn’t my favorite. It ended up blowing over in a monsoon and they let me pick a new one. I chose a red push pistache. It is now getting to be big and beautiful.Back to trees.
Willow Acacia is a good desert tree. Pretty clean.
After Hurricane Ike killed many trees in Galveston, artists used chainsaws to sculpt the tree stumps. These trees did not get blown over but were killed by several feet of storm surge poisoning them with salt water.Maybe you can carve it into an animal, like a grizzly bear?
Agreed. While I loved the shade that the tree provided (especially over by the BBQ), it created nothing but a landscape mess. Constant beans, flowers, needles, leaves ... just made a mess of everything and a royal pain in the rear to clean up. When you prune them, it instigates immediate sucker growth all along the branches that are pruned so you can never keep it properly thinned out and shaped - landscapers love them because it means a constant supply of tree trimming work for them every year. Plus, the beans are a favorite for the ground squirrels and pack rats - I've had to pull out quite a few pack rat nests over the years and I really hate that. I contracted valley fever once from messing around in the dirt and I'd rather never go through that again. And you are quite correct, they are never planted right or watered correctly and, insanely enough, they are constantly placed near block walls where they eventually attack the footers and uproot the wall. Not a good choice of landscaping tree.
As for replanting ... well, there will eventually be a giant hole there ... maybe I should plant my fig tree in it(actually, a fig would be worse - fruit to attract the pests AND shallow aggressive roots to go after the wall). Red pistache is a great tree. I also like Velvet Ash trees and Sacred Fig (non-fruiting). We are also thinking about doing some more backyard (de)construction, so I may leave it bare until we figure out what to do back by that wall.
Step one - find someone to come take it down when there is NO ONE available for the next 3 to 4 weeks ...![]()