My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
3A Public Hearing 2008 0122
CityHall
>
City Clerk
>
City Council
>
Agenda Packets
>
2008
>
Packet 2008 0122
>
3A Public Hearing 2008 0122
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
1/22/2008 10:22:05 AM
Creation date
1/22/2008 10:22:03 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CM City Clerk-City Council
CM City Clerk-City Council - Document Type
Staff Report
Document Date (6)
1/22/2008
Retention
PERM
Document Relationships
_CC Agenda 2008 0122
(Reference)
Path:
\City Clerk\City Council\Agenda Packets\2008\Packet 2008 0122
MO 2008-004
(Reference)
Path:
\City Clerk\City Council\Minute Orders\2008
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
102
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Davidon Homes, July 2007 HortScience, Inc. <br />Tree Report, Woodside Apartments Page 2 <br />Description of Trees <br />Forty-three (43) trees, representing six (6) species, were assessed. Descriptions of each <br />tree are provided in the Tree Survey Forms and locations are plotted on the Tree <br />Survey Map (see Attachments). <br />Tree condition was evenly divided between fair (21 trees, or 49% of the population) and <br />good (with 22 trees, or 51% of the population). Table 1, following page, provides a <br />summary of tree condition by species. <br />The most common species surveyed was sweet gum, with 22 trees, or 51 % of the <br />population. The next most common skies was coast redwood, with 12 trees, or 28% of <br />the population. <br />Certain species had performed better than others, due in part to the maintenance <br />practices employed. Coast redwoods had performed well, however, many had been <br />planted in close proximity to one another and groups of trees were never thinned. <br />Additionally, several of the trees were planted in close proximity to buildings, requiring <br />they be pruned to clear the structures for maintenance. <br />Photo 1: A row of sweet. gums planted on <br />Haas Avenue in dose proximity to utility <br />lines (blue lines). Pruning for utility line <br />clearance had topped some trees. Those <br />that had not been topped previously will <br />likely be topped in the future. Surface <br />rooting was noted on 15 of the 22 sweet <br />gums surveyed (inset). <br />Where sweet gums had been planted beneath, or in close proximity to utility lines running <br />along Haas Avenue, utility line clearance pruning had affected tree condition (Photo 1). <br />Four (4) of the 11 sweet gums surveyed along Haas Avenue had been topped for utility <br />line clearance. Additionally, 15 of the sweet gums had notable surface root development, <br />displacing infrastructure in two instances. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.