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After breakfast and the obligatory writing session at the coffee shop, I swung by Home Depot to acquire my very own electric pole chainsaw and then accomplished the following:

* Finished pruning the ornamental plum in the front yard. (I think I have it in me to do serious pruning on one or two trees a year. Must remember to rotate appropriately.)
* Took off the several limbs from the other front-yard shade tree that were seriously menacing the sidewalk.
* Did some desultory hacking at major overhanging limbs from trees along the front west property line.
* Dragged the results of all this carnage into the side of the driveway to await hauling and/or shredding depending on what option comes cheapest.
* Mowed the front lawn.
* Failed to damage my ankle in the hidden pit-fall.[*]
* Pruned the dead wood out of the apple tree that I hadn't gotten to in last year's pruning.
* Took off the seriously leaning limbs on the lilac and tidied it up.
* Chopped a bunch of other shrubbery off at the fence line in the back west corner of the yard.
* Did some basic pruning of the backyard plum tree: took some height off, took the main limbs back to a length that can support the weight of the fruit, removed any limbs likely to overhand the neighbor's yard.
* Asked the neighbor if I could go in their back yard to clean up the pruned branches. SUggested I might prune the olive tree from their side while I was at it. Have earned brownie points with neighbors.
* Cut the grape vine (why yes, I have a volunteer grapevine -- no fruit that I've seen yet) back to something I might be able to stake to the fence ... assuming I remember to do so.
* Dragged all the backyard trimmings into the side yard but failed to get as far as adding them to the pile in the driveway. (Since I have a 3-car-wide driveway, none of this will interfere with getting the car in and out.)
* Probably succeeded in not scratching my cornea with a flailing olive branch but it's still a bit sore.
* Hot shower, chicken slow-roasting in the oven with acorn squash, stiff drink, and that silly football game is still going on evidently.

When I was at Home Depot I contemplated picking up some 4" lavenders and rosemarys to put in the gaps in the parking strip but I bethought myself on my rule of thumb that plants should go in the ground the day I buy them and correctly predicted that I'd run out of steam before that could happen.

[*] Whoever removed several dead trees from my yard at some point before I bought it seems to have been enamored of some sort of enzymatic stump-disintegrator process. It works exceedingly well. Eventually, where there had once been a ground-level stump and underground root system, there is a thoroughly digested spongy mass under the illusion of soil. At some point, when you step on this location, your foot will sink through the sponge. This will be very disconcerting.

You have

Date: 2013-02-04 06:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] helblonde.livejournal.com
As a posessor of a stump (and, hopefully several more in the coming year), I am quite curious about the enzymatic dissolution. This may well solve an inconvenient problem.

Re: You have

Date: 2013-02-05 04:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hrj.livejournal.com
Unfortunately, all I know is the effect, not the specific method used. I say "enzymatic" but it could be some sort of live biologic agent since the effect is mildly similar to dry-rot ... which I must say is a rather disconcerting thing to consider as a deliberate technique. All I know is that the stump/root decomposition is proceeding faster than it would naturally, so some sort of accelerant is clearly in use.

Hmm, after some minor googling ... the general principles seem to be easy to find, e.g., here (http://topics.info.com/Stump-Removal_1737), but I don't see any specific brands mentioned. The descriptions seem to indicate that you just accelerate the natural decay process with a high-nitrogen fertilizer drilled into holes in the stump. But everyone notes that it still takes quite some time to work. The stump-hole I stepped in yesterday was quite solid a year and a half ago when I bought the house and I don't recall noticing a significant softness back last summer when I was mowing regularly. So expect the process to take a couple years.
Edited Date: 2013-02-05 05:03 am (UTC)

Date: 2013-02-05 08:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] helblonde.livejournal.com
That is good to know. It might work for the stumps in the front yard, but would probably be a poor choice for the one in the back. Thank you!

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