Every weekend I walk through the woods of Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park to see how things are turning out for the trees we have girdled and the plants we need to grow in their place. The first weekend of July 2019 I came across a large live oak, shown in the second picture below, that is suffering the damage glossy privets do to larger shade trees:
Whenever I see a native shade tree in this condition, it becomes an immediate priority. Instead of continuing our march through the woods on the other side of the trail, this weekend we focused on saving this tree.
In three hours, three of us managed to uproot 27 Nandina domestica and girdle each of the 46 trunks of the 13 glossy privets (Ligustrum lucidum)—that's right; in the same area taken up by the canopy of this one live oak, there are 13 glossy privets—and to reach half of them we had to uproot the Nandina first.
So today, July 13, 2019, this live oak's chance to recover begins. Over the coming year, I will report on the response of the glossy privets to their girdling and the response of this tree to its increasing access to all the available sunlight.
This large tree rose above the glossy privets—but has lost every leaf and lateral branch below the top of their canopy. Hopefully now that much of the privet has been removed it will add at least some new growth at these lower levels.
This live oak is being shaded out by 13 glossy privets that sprouted beneath its canopy over the years. A large limb is dead, broken away, and hanging in a juniper. Above it, another large limb remains attached, but seems to also be dead. On July 13, 2019, we girdled each of these privets. Over the coming year, we will see if they die away and, if so, how the live oak responds.
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