Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Does anybody know why Southwark council are currently decapitating almost every single tree on Oglander Road? They are cutting away every branch just leaving the stumpy branches. Which now means we have a very grey summer to look forward to. I guess they just want to spend their budget somehow.What a waste
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/41017-ott-tree-pruning/
Share on other sites

You can write to them Daniel, there is a designated Tree Officer.

The usual reason cited is 'crown reduction', intended to reduce the overall bulk and therefore the instability of a tree close to buildings.


Fruit trees should be well pruned - reduced by about a third each year, branches shaped like a bowl to catch the sunshine. Far better crops will result.


Everything will grow back fairly well, but I agree is horrible when first done. At least the Council has heeded our request that people aren't at work on the trees just as birds start to nest.

The next thng is to get better choices of species for urban planting. With climate change come challenges. Some fungi & insects boom, weakening particular trees, and rainfall goes haywire making the Victorain drain systems then tree root/subsidence problems proliferate.


Very hot summers are hell in cities without trees. Well chosen for shade, plus drought and disease resistance are all set to be the name of the game.

The reason, simply, is that street trees can't spread too much or grow too high, or they become a hazard to traffic, powerlines, houses, children, buildings, roads, drains, sewers, insurers and kittens.


If you look at old photos of Dulwich, or even Google's Streetview, you'll see that it's a regular thing done every so few years, especially to plane trees, and has been since they were little more than saplings, apart from a few periods when trees were simply felled rather than managed when they got in the way of buses. You'll also see that the trees in surrounding streets are managed in the same way, but in different years (the misguided got all upset about Heber Road last year, for example).


And it's not just Southwark. Throughout London, with very few exceptions, all mature street trees have been regularly pruned, pollarded, reduced or whatever, to no obvious ill effect for decades and sometimes centuries. It's one of the reasons why so few of them have fallen over in the recent storms, compared with trees in parks. If there's anything to complain about at all it's that the published schedule of tree works hasn't been updated since October.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I can't guarantee that they'll have what you're after but I was very impressed with The Nunhead Gardener this week.  I'd also been to Croxted Road and the Pot and Plant next to North Dulwich Station and the selection at both paled by comparison.
    • Not attached to anything but did have a collar on but I thought that was strange too. I wasn’t sure what to do after i saw the woman go after him/her, as I didn’t know where he/she had gone (or if she/he perhaps was taken home after that point)
    • I can vouch for a Berberis being a good thorny deterrent, and colorful too... https://www.jacksonsnurseries.co.uk/hedging-plants/thorny-prickly-intruder-proof-hedging-plants/ Gooseberry bushes have thorns plus the added bonus of the fruit... https://www.jacksonsnurseries.co.uk/?subcats=Y&pcode_from_q=Y&pshort=Y&pfull=Y&pname=Y&pkeywords=Y&search_performed=Y&q=gooseberry&dispatch=products.search&security_hash=66c20a8bb7c61038d2180d03a4660735
    • Was it not attached to anything? It seems a bit odd to leave a dog just standing by itself, if not. Also a bit odd if it ran away when its owner returned. You would think a happy dog would be pleased to see its owner. Was that outside the cafe in the park?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...