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  1. SeanKroll

    Climbing rope embedded in tree

    I suppose there is a special layer of growth, wall 4, between the wood present at the time of wounding, and new woundwood growth. I was thinking of woundwood as new growth, not containment of decay.
  2. SeanKroll

    Climbing rope embedded in tree

    I don't think damage and decay are the same. Fungal decay may, or in time, will come into the compression-damaged/ killed tissue.
  3. SeanKroll

    Climbing rope embedded in tree

    Chop/chisel/ hand saw the rope. Rope will jam up your chainsaw.
  4. SeanKroll

    Climbing rope embedded in tree

    Compartmentalization has to do with micro-organisms. This is abiotic damage.
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