Tree Lopping, Removal, Pruning and Mulching in the Dandenong Ranges

From the Blog

We often do work on trees that are obstructing solar panels from receiving maximum sunlight, or satellite services. Sometimes the tree has grown toward the available light, other times the solar or satellite service was installed in a poor location. Most of the time the tree can be pruned and trimmed to allow good service.

Recently we completed a job for a new solar panel installation where a number of large trees were blocking out almost all of the available sun throughout the day. Trees are very good at doing this as their major source of energy is through photosynthesis – this makes them natural competitors for light.

When considering how you are going to manage the installation, it is important to consider the effects of performing tree works to the surrounding environment – not just the improvement of light!

By removing or heavily pruning trees your property has a higher exposure to wind, and is less protected from extreme weather. The shade that is normally cast over your house during the summer may be gone, increasing the energy cost of keeping cool. Increased wind flow can affect other trees which did not grow accustomed to high wind loading, potentially leading to failure. The wind can also reduce your homes ability to stay warm.

Do you have the required permits for the works to be done? By going ahead with unapproved tree work, you may be opening yourself up to liability from your local shire or neighbour.

If you have considered the environmental effects of canopy reduction of your trees, then we can help.

I’ve put a few photos of some recent work where a house extension had been planned, solar panels had just been installed and the owner was interesting in maximising the energy gained during the day.

His 11am solar input went from 260 kWh to 2800 kWh. Over 10 times!

With careful planning and analyse of your vegetation problem, we can trim, prune or remove the trees you require to improve your solar power system or satellite reception.

 

Did another job in Kinglake earlier today, removing fire killed and damaged trees from a block.

Hazard trees still posing a threat to the rebuilding effort in Kinglake and Marysville are carefully monitored for defects and future failures.

We removed a number of Blackwoods and Mountain Ash which hadn’t survived the fire, and pruned two Mountain Grey Gums.

Joe Harris from ‘into trees‘ assisted in the tree works. The photos were taking from Kinglake Central with the backdrop of Melbourne (DSE had a big burn on today, so it was a bit smokey around the state).

A major part of our business is advance stabilisation work for customers that have suffered storm damage or sudden branch failure.

We have an armada of heavy lifting, winches and technical rigging equipment to service trees that pose an immediate hazard to life or property.

After heavy wind and rain, trees can often fail in a variety of places. In most cases these are an expected part of the forest life cycle.

Unfortunately, other times these may be a significant asset or feature to a home owner.

When the tree fails, often the home owner will need to assess the hazards and potential costs of further degeneration.

While these decisions are being made, any immediate hazards needs to neutralised so that decisions are not made under pressure and haste.

We have access rigging devices such as heavy blocks and tackles, jacks, cables, zero stretch ropes, lowering devices through to cranes, helicopters, excavators, harvesters.

We’ve been doing some work with the Department of Sustainability and Environment in Marysville, cabling mature Mountain Ash away from a public access area.

We used tree jacks for many of the trees, others we set large cables and winched over with the DSE D4. The object of the works was to make safe a walking track that passed below many of these dead trees. Graeme has decades of experience in mature tree felling, which makes the task of assessing and planning for works a lot easier in the forest environment.
In many of the below photos you will notice most of the trees are felled from boards. These are used in steep terrain where it is difficult to safely work on the tree.

We had a mature Mountain Ash to fall recently in Sherbrooke. We had a set of tree jacks to test, so we set them up and tipped it over.

The tree was completely dead, and was standing up quite straight – wedging isn’t really practical in this situation.

Click on the pictures to see a larger version. We do tree removals all throughout Cardinia and the Yarra Ranges.

Whilst many of our photos are from Sherbrooke, Olinda, Mount Dandenong, Ferny Creek, Sassafras and Menzies Creek, we also work in the surrounding suburbs of

Emerald, Cockatoo, Avonsleigh, Clematis, Belgrave, Monbulk, Kallista, Upwey, Ferntree Gully, Tecoma, Yellingbo.

We service all of the Dandenong Ranges in the Shire of Yarra Ranges.

  • Belgrave
  • Kallista
  • Kalorama
  • Macclesfield
  • Menzies Creek
  • Monbulk
  • Mount Dandenong
  • Olinda
  • Sassafras
  • Seville
  • Sherbrooke
  • Silvan
  • The Patch

Some of our services include

Contact us for more information!

A large Oak tree in Mt Dandenong was damaged during a severe storm. One half of it landed on the owners property, the other half of the tree landed on the neighbours.

Sherbrooke Tree Service was engaged to perform the tree removal. Our new 8″ Rayco Chipper was used to create a mulch for the customer and the trunk was cut up for firewood.

Our wood chipper backs up to the fallen Oak tree

Complex rigging and storm damage works are an area of speciality for Sherbrooke Tree Service. The nature of the large tree’s in the Dandenong Ranges coupled with the rigging equipment we’ve accumulated in over 30 years of servicing the area means we are efficient and safe in handling emergency tree works, storm damage clean-ups and complex tree rigging tasks.

Our new Rayco mulcher has arrived and it got a test run at One Tree Hill on Mt Dandenong. We fell two tree’s then chipped the heads and branches.
The 8″ chipper can be towed behind a standard four wheel drive, and is fantastic for jobs where there are access limitations.
The mulch is produces is fine and consistent, fantastic to handle.

Rayco wood chipper

Our new chipper, chipping the tree branches back into the forest.

The two tree’s were part of a fire break easement that we were helping to clear. The wood was put into the forest using our excavator with the log grab.
By using our excavator on jobs like this, the manual, back breaking work of cutting up all the wood and rolling it aside is forgotten – allowing us to be more efficient and safer.

Cat Excavator carrying some logs down the hill.

Graeme carrys a log down the hill while rolling another with the excavator with the log grab.

A large Eucalyptus regnans out the front of William Ricketts sanctuary needed to be removed. William Ricketts Sanctuary is located in Melbourne’s south-east in the Dandenong ranges, and is managed by Parks Victoria.
Climbing Large Regnans
Graeme accesses the tree and rigs a branch for lowering.

Lowering the branches using a variety of techniques.

Excavator 302.5
The newest employee of Sherbrooke Tree Service has arrived.

Our new excavator arrived just before Christmas. This will be used primary for the tree lopping and track maintenance work we do in Cardinia Shire and Yarra Ranges Shire. The excavator has a log grab, or ‘beck’, that is used to grab hold of logs and trees to reduce our handling time. During the fire clean up post Black Saturday, machines like this were invaluable for crews in handling large trees and branches. The excavator will have an angle grinder attachment in the near future, which will make large metal cutting a lot easier.

This excavator will also save a lot of the back breaking work involved in track clearing and track maintenance – another service which we provide as part of our tree hazard reduction in high visitation areas.

Used in tandem with our Lucas Mill, moving logs in and out of the processing area will be a lot simpler too!

Similar to Grants Picnic Ground removal, Graeme hangs the tree upside down and then uses a crane from Campbell Cranes to lift the long limbs off.
Ace Tree and Ace Tower were there on the day helping us out with their chipper and 60m Tower. Once the limbs were removed, the heads were felled and the log sections lifted.

This climbing video is also on youtube in HD!

Graeme descends onto a dead and rotten tree so that he can safely work on it. After lopping out the head, the rest of the tree is blocked down.
When the tree we are removing is too dangerous to climb or be attached to normally, tree loppers will often gain access from another high point. This particular Mountain Ash was over the top of a high visitation walking track, and was one of several dead Eucalyptus regnans that needed to be removed for public safety.

This large dead Eucalyptus regnans was threatening a viewing platform over the top of Olinda Falls in Yarra Ranges Shire. The tree had a bee’s nest, and had a thin shell at the base which had been burnt out in a previous bushfire. After using explosives to safely remove the large limbs, Graeme then fell the head away from the viewing platform into the forest.

In the main entrance to Sherbrooke Forest, there was a large Eucalyptus regnans which had three 120′ long branches overhanging the car parking area. Graeme removed these by lopping each and catching it onto itself in order to protect the facilities below. To do this safely, Graeme needed to be able to egress from the departing limb and stay clear of the spar. The video shown is the first of three.