Green Falling Limbs

   / Green Falling Limbs #1  

oldballs

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Dec 29, 2009
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Location
Kansas...USA
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This must be some phenomenon of nature. The past week two approx 12 foot limbs of about 3 inch diameter with fully green leaves have just fallen out of my 45 year old Sycamores. It has been unusually dry this spring and summer so far. One was a clean break the other sort of splinter at the break. What's with that?:confused3:

Cheers,
Mike
 
   / Green Falling Limbs #2  
A good question.

Late last Friday/early Saturday, I lost a large limb from a red oak (I'm guessing well over 100 years old) at my farm. The limb was about 25' feet long and +20" in diameter at the butt end when it splintered about 24" from the trunk. The butt end showed some deterioration, but it was fully laden with green leaves.:confused3:

Steve
 
   / Green Falling Limbs #3  
The term "widow maker" comes to mind but that is in the logging industry. Where you are actively falling large trees and the limb comes from the fallen tree or one it fell into.

On my 80 acres - I have 3 or 4 large pines with big dead limbs - way up high. All are broken and hanging on to the tree by a splintered break in the limb.

All are big enough - that if they fell on me - would drive me into the ground like a T-133 fence post. I keep a close watch on these few trees and hope some day, the wind will bring these limbs down.
 
   / Green Falling Limbs
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Thanks oosik. These are not the classic "widow maker" . Usually they are hanging up there from a storm or some other tree falling.

These limbs are fresh green limbs that came down without any storm or other tree activity. And they do not have a rotten center from some disease. Of course, if i had been there at the time.........I too would have been in the "widow maker" class of 2018.
 
   / Green Falling Limbs #5  
I've never been a fan of Sycamore trees... because... when I was young, we were playing tag or something. I was being chased, ran up a sycomore tree like a squirrel, went hand-over-hand out a pretty thick branch about 15' up, and swung my legs up to grip it with all 4's. As soon as my legs got around that branch, and with me hanging there upside down in classic tree sloth form, the branch snapped off the trunk and I came straight down onto my back with the branch plastering me into the dirt. Lights out. Next thing I know, some kids and my mom are staring down at me calling my name. Lights out again. They put me on a cot and carried me home... :rolleyes:
 
   / Green Falling Limbs #6  
Have you been able to come up with any explanations - now that you have had more time to look at the two limbs. I don't know the first thing about Sycamores but there is one common truth - healthy green limbs don't normally just fall out of trees. Actually, around here, a lot of my pines have dead limbs that stay with the tree as long as the tree is vertical. Its just the 3or 4 that the dead limbs are broken and hanging on by splintered break.

I don't imagine you have adventurous climbing beavers in your neighborhood either. And porcupines will only eat the underbark layer - never seen them chew thru an entire limb.

Or as in my situation - the dam porkies chewed on the wooden handles of my wheelbarrow - salty sweat soaked into the wooden handles.
 
   / Green Falling Limbs #7  
MossRoad said:
I've never been a fan of Sycamore trees... because... when I was young, we were playing tag or something. I was being chased, ran up a sycomore tree like a squirrel, went hand-over-hand out a pretty thick branch about 15' up, and swung my legs up to grip it with all 4's. As soon as my legs got around that branch, and with me hanging there upside down in classic tree sloth form, the branch snapped off the trunk and I came straight down onto my back with the branch plastering me into the dirt. Lights out. Next thing I know, some kids and my mom are staring down at me calling my name. Lights out again. They put me on a cot and carried me home... :rolleyes:
..........................
Just a part of being kid growing up. :thumbsup:
 
   / Green Falling Limbs #8  
Yeah, like licking the metal window frame in winter.... :laughing:
 
   / Green Falling Limbs
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Sycamores are known to experience a phenomenon called "Summer Branch Drop". More information about this phenomenon can be found at this link from the Journal of Arboriculture. (http://bit.ly/1HormZb)

Big Sycamore Tree... Big Problem? - HOrT COCO-UC Master Gardener Program of Contra Costa - ANR Blogs

Well, I never thought an answer would be forthcoming. " rekees4300", Thanks for your response and links. That must be it. The hot dry summer continues at my place. It has stormed and rained all around but not here. Maybe I'll take a pic of any new branches that drop.

Cheers,
Mike
 

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