However, it wasn't easy. East Village resident Joe Kay shared this photo, noting "that elm ate one of their chainsaws!"
Showing posts with label American elm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American elm. Show all posts
Sunday, July 27, 2025
American elm chainsaw massacre
Parks workers chopped up and removed the remains of the stricken American elm in Tompkins Square Park.
Friday, July 25, 2025
Post-mortem on the freshly cutback American elm in Tompkins Square Park
Photos by and reporting by Stacie Joy
On Tuesday, the Parks Department cut back the drooping American elm inside the Seventh Street entrance to Tompkins Square Park between Avenue A and Avenue B.
Before this happened, I had reached out to urban forestry expert Georgia Silvera Seamans, founder of Local Nature Lab. (Read her initial response here.)
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Parks Department prunes drooping elm in Tompkins Square Park
Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy
Top pic Sunday by EVG
7/25 — Update here.
-----
Visitors to Tompkins Square Park over the weekend noticed something amiss with one of its older residents: a large American elm just inside the Seventh Street entrance between Avenue A and Avenue B.
Several low-hanging branches appeared drooped or stressed, prompting speculation among locals about whether the tree might be suffering from Sudden Branch Drop (SBD), a phenomenon that can affect mature trees in the summer months.
But not so fast, says urban forestry expert Georgia Silvera Seamans.
"From the photos on EVG, it looks like there is some kind of torsion on the leftmost branch from the trunk," said Silvera Seamans, founder of Local Nature Lab and an expert in urban tree health. "This could have been caused by an imbalance in weight on the left side of the tree compared to the overall tree. The crotch — the gap between the branches where they split from the trunk — could be weak."
Without examining the elm in person, she cautioned against jumping to conclusions but suggested the issue may be more structural than seasonal.
"It also looks like two branches are rubbing together," she added. "My bet is something structural, which could be related to weight, age, or disease."
As for whether the elm can be saved, Silvera Seamans said that it depends on what a professional arborist finds during an in-person inspection.
"Branches could be pruned to lighten the load, heavier branches supported with tree braces, upper branches could be cabled," she said.
Following our conversation, I walked by the tree to find that the Parks Department had cut it back yesterday — hopefully a sign that the elm will remain a healthy fixture in the park for years to come.
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Concern for this drooping American elm in Tompkins Square Park
There's caution tape around one of the majestic American elms in Tompkins Square Park, just inside the mid-block entrance on Seventh Street between Avenue A and Avenue B.
EVG reader Kate, who also sent in a photo, noted that the tree's branches are drooping noticeably now....
The tree map, provided by the Parks Department, indicates that it was inspected in February, with an unspecified service performed in May.
Here's hoping it just needs some pruning — and not something more serious.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)