Strange to see that much light that late. What is your latitude?
This maple was alive last year, but struggling. We had a hot, drought last summer.
There were a few green leaves this year, and a few vertical cracks in the base, plus a bad inclusion.
This is the one with the trucker's strap for the inclusion from Paul's Tree Service.
Unfortunately, I underbid it some. Hard to tell when there are rookies on the ground. They did a good job. Green. Have a new guy starting tomorrow who is looking for full time in the summer, after school ends. A year's experience in Seattle. A little climbing DDRT on a VT experience. One of the green guys only can work for a few weekends until school ends. Works out.
Wraptor, APTA, Belay Spool were handy, and the mini. I didn't want the rookie groundies on a POW and block.
Free dropped some big brushy pieces onto the asphalt. Roped a lot of brush down. Reminded that Western Red Cedars are velcro-trees. MFs grab onto everything, like dead maple branches on a rope! A bit of speed lining. Then dumped chunks into a tight drainage swale, all things considered. The road is a bit rough, and the end of the asphalt was only a hair rougher by the end. Had a bit of a dirt crash area for the more upright leader.
Almost cratered the road with one on the leaning stem. I needed to bring to back and sideways, and naturally it was leaning away from me over the road. I cut it a little too big, and with the moss and non-90 degree lip, I almost lost it. I had resigned myself to it, mentally, then gave it one big rocking pull toward me, and dumped it to the side. Should have cut it smaller. I burnt up my 28" sprocket, and haven't replaced it, so was chunking down with a 20" that was a bit short, so I was going a bit larger than I should have, especially for the swale.
All's well that fells well.
A couple bat boxes on a wildlife habitat snag, about 16' tall.
In hindsight, a crane would have been in order. I bid it last year. Been super busy. Just jumped into it, and tried to reduce rigging loading, and such.