Fire their aspirations for a fat pensions!

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treelooker

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http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/n...back=.gde_2563716_member_201433603#cmComments

right re intent, no doubt fueled by the communication with the risk manager. They overreacted to target rating and neglected to do a reasonable level of inspection for condition. re species, ficus in Hong Kong are about 70% of the urban canopy because they are extremely durable and adaptable. Mitigation options were evidently not considered, nor were the contributions of the tree.

That's 5 Omissions, unless they show otherwise. Ignoring the BMP on 5 major points does not sound like due diligence, but IANAL.

It's a breakdown in communications, if the risk manager answers to the county manager. If it was intentional, maybe the appraised value could come out of their checks. Why should taxpayers foot the replacement bill?

Coppicing could be considered here. And we need to remember that "obvious defects" with any kind of adaptive growth are very poor indicators of strength and risk--that is the consensus among researchers.
 
"Martin Cybulski, the city’s former horticulturist, said large ficus trees can be transplanted.
“I’ve seen them cut giant ficus trees in half, transport them and splice them together,” Cybulski said. “They do beautifully.”"

Cut them in half and splice them back together eh?
 
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Splicing trunks, right, these guys are obviously pros.
 
Splicing trees is new to me. Ive spliced many a trailer light wires. I can even splice a cigarette together if the pack gets crushed. But trees are out of my league.
 
Splice, cut trunks... probably easier to transport. Pull the stump and roots out ...reVsite in new hole, then splice trunk right back on the stump. Probably water heavily too....
 
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