Roots are uplifting the deck tiles. Only access is a 45" wide gate. We discussed draining the pool; they know it's going to be a huge mess however we do it. This is not a good time to close the pool. They may put it off until winter.
Took my wife out for dinner this evening at the local Miller's Ale House. It's one of the few places where she actually enjoys the food. We don't eat out very often because she has a sensitive tummy. She loves their Fiesta Chicken & Shrimp Bowl. I ordered a Filet Mignon, but it was tough and...
We tried that once before with a similar palm. Made a club sandwich with 3 sheets of 3/4" plywood and two sheets of 1/2" styrofoam. It still popped a thick paver where the head landed.
I think she found someone to do it on Tuesday for about $1,000. Looks like minimal damage to the house and a fairly easy removal. One guy quoted her $12,000!
Good ideas, all. I was thinking plywood and Styrofoam sandwiches to drop chunks onto. They're not huge, about 20' to 30' of clear trunk. It's going to be extremely messy.
I need some creative ideas to get these ten Sylvester palms down without damaging the surrounding pools tiles. There is no bucket or crane access. I have a plan in mind but I'm open to suggestions.
I've not seen anyone alluding to the true cause of this event; chem-trails mixing with cow farts and climate change. More taxes and a few new government agencies should be able to fix it.
I'm paraphrasing, but someone somewhere once said something along the lines of, "If you claim to understand quantum physics, then you don't understand quantum physics."
I've never seen a battery powered lift. My Teupen had a plug-in option. 110 volt. I even bought 200 feet of heavy duty extension cords, but never used that option. Sold the lift, still have the cords, unused, in the box.
What I've done there is known as a "hurricane prune." Ignorant folks think it's better to trim off nearly everything since it will prevent them from breaking during storms, and to prolong the time until the next pruning cycle. In reality, it simply starves the plant of food, which is produced by...
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