A tree felling course near me left a big hole in my pocket. The tree I was using felled in the winter and now it is a huge mess that needs to be replaced. This is actually a fairly common occurrence as trees sometimes shed their leaves in the winter. This means that their roots can get all tangled up and this in turn can cause them to break off and then fall. Now, I am stuck having to pay for the hole the tree felled in and I have no idea on how to fill in the hole with soil.
This is actually a rather common issue because trees will shed their leaves in the winter, but this doesn't mean that the tree is already damaged. It just means that there are weak veins in the leaves and this can cause the tree to break when the warm weather comes back in. This is why I took my tree felling course near Whitianga in the Bay of Plenty this year.
The first tree felling course near me had been open for four months and it was a beautiful deciduous tree. The area around it is completely dead therefore the tree needs to regrow new leaves to replace those that have fallen from the tree. The tree is also damaged in other ways too because of the cold weather and this means that the roots are going to get even more tangled up. If you go and do your tree felling course near Whitianga, you can prevent this happening because the tree should regrow new leaves on its own in about four months. It will also grow back strong roots.
The second tree felling course near me also needed a tree felling course near Whitianga. This particular tree felled due to pests and rot so the ground around it was overgrown with brush and bush. The soil was so hard that the plant simply bucked and fell. I have to warn anyone who has a passion for trees - never attempt to fell a tree by hand! It is so easy to cause injury and you could end up causing more damage.
The third tree felling course near me had several years of bad weather. This meant that the ground was overgrown with grass and bush. This grass and bush made the root of the tree vulnerable to being snagged and trapped. I went to my tree felling course near Whitianga last week and the newly planted root systems were quite healthy. The rain had washed away much of the previous year's overgrowth but there was still enough to slow the growth of the tree.
Finally, there was one tree felling course near Whitianga that I could not visit because the site was on private property. The owner of the land said that he would only allow his employees to cut down small branches, no bigger. Apparently this was because he had just built a brand new wood fence three weeks before, which he had kept up very well.