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Removing a Willow Tree?

I have a huge willow tree that unfortunately we will be removing. Will the roots still grow? Or by leaving just a stump will that stop the growth of all the roots?

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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 677 Posts
March 17, 20180 found this helpful

Since the tree is large, you cannot remove it yourself. The company that does it must remove the stump and cut all the roots. Here is an article that explains the procedure: homeguides.sfgate.com/dig-out-willow-tree-37712.html

 

Diamond Post Medal for All Time! 1,298 Posts
March 17, 20180 found this helpful

It is best to remove the stump completely so the tree will not regrow.

 

Bronze Post Medal for All Time! 107 Posts
March 18, 20180 found this helpful

a willow stump will most definitely grow back again in the fullness of time. Options include stump removal, digging around the stump, and herbicide.

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More info found here homeguides.sfgate.com/stop-stumps-regrowing-73576.html

 

Bronze Tip Medal for All Time! 64 Tips
March 20, 20181 found this helpful

Pls do not use herbicides. Most herbicides are responsible for bee colony collapse. We need bees as pollinators and they are dying off because of herbicide use

 
March 25, 20180 found this helpful

So many have said that the tree will keep growing after it's cut down. I have a different experience. I had a beautiful willow tree that got severely damaged during an ice storm in 1996.

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it had to be cut down. The stump is still there just as it was the day it was cut down. Nothing has ever grown back and I put a planter of trailing flowers on it every year.

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 131 Feedbacks
March 25, 20180 found this helpful

Hello !
That is right not every willow will grow again after being cut because there are different types of willows and trees are just like humans. An old and big willow will not recover and will not grow again as rapidly as a young one. Willows do not live long anyway. The white willow: Salix viminalis lives only 30 years and Salix caprea only 50 years which is a quite short life for a tree.

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If you buy a house with a 30 years old willow in the garden you don't have to worry about the damage the willow can do to water pipes because at this age it has already reached its full growth and will not do more damage than it has already done. New shoots from a cut down willow start from the bark or the roots but not from deeper in the stump than only the bark thickness and if the willow is very old and its bark is very thick and very hard, it will not be possible for the new shoots to appear on the stump. That is why one way to avoid the regrowth of a willow from a stump is to chop off the bark. An old tree also creates a microclimate with, for example, the shadow the branches makes around the foot of the tree, and when suddenly the foot and the superficial roots are back in full sun because the willow was cut down it can dry out the soil and stop the tree producing new shoots, especially a willow which depends so much on water supply in its early years.

 
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