How And Why To Girdle A Tree {Tree Girdling}

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  • čas přidán 9. 02. 2020
  • I explain tree girdling steps and practices for those who may want to kill a tree before they cut it down. Simple, easy to understand tree girdle, tree ringing information from American-Outdoors.net.
    Tree girdling can be completed using tools such as chainsaws, and axe, tree saw, a torch or many of the tree girdling tools available online and in store.
    It is a land management tool designed for purposes such as created den trees, perforating the tree canopy to allow sunlight into smaller trees and vegetation and selecting trees for future felling and firewood.
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Komentáře • 96

  • @jamieyeomans3803
    @jamieyeomans3803 Před 3 lety +4

    hats off to you, not very often you tubers talk about safety and demonstrates good safety practices.

  • @marypettitt9150
    @marypettitt9150 Před 3 lety +3

    St Adelaide 7th graders liked this. It was very informative.

  • @rolandocrisostomo2003
    @rolandocrisostomo2003 Před měsícem +2

    My grand father would drill holes at a downward degree with a good size drill bit and fill the holes with diesel fuel. He called them diesel trees when ask about the odd holes going up in a spiral

  • @nealhammond1454
    @nealhammond1454 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Thanks for the detailed video! I have about 100 trees that around 20 years old that I need to do this too in a stand of about 250 so the other can grow better as they were planted ever 8-10’!
    Also, thankful to hear that is a step for firewood as that was a question of mine if I could do this and later come back to a tree if it would dry out and be good firewood 😊

  • @dijasom
    @dijasom Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for the tree hugger joke, and the experience.

  • @tg1304
    @tg1304 Před rokem +2

    EXTREMELY helpful. Thank you. I was struggling with how to get some of the overgrown trees to stop shading my pool area & didn’t want to have them cut down right away because I don’t have time to deal with them.

  • @clayrocks3
    @clayrocks3 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for the clear concise instructions. Just as detailed as it needed to be!

  • @rosalacanilao1484
    @rosalacanilao1484 Před 3 lety +5

    It is very informative, i can use it for my students in forestry as a supplemental video clip.

  • @TheIndanan
    @TheIndanan Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you very much for this information I have been harvesting firewood on my property here in North Carolina since 2006. This will be much better for me and with the tree not on the ground with a few inches of rot by the time I get to it.. girdling and flagging trees this weekend. Thanks again for your information,,👍

  • @Iowaflyboy1
    @Iowaflyboy1 Před 4 lety +5

    Thank you, I am interested in Girdling some trees on my property for snags. This gave me some good points to ponder.

  • @TheEmmyjean
    @TheEmmyjean Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you! This was very helpful, I just acquired wooded property that I'm trying to establish for wildlife habitat.

  • @WoodsTreeFarm
    @WoodsTreeFarm Před 4 lety +6

    Very informative video. I'm looking to clean up my 25ac of mature hardwoods and this is probably one method I'll end up using

  • @jamesgowgodofwar3721
    @jamesgowgodofwar3721 Před 4 lety +1

    Cool man I'm moving deep into the woods of West Virginia I'm starting on girdling this weekend

  • @mungingparaiso4298
    @mungingparaiso4298 Před rokem +1

    Very informative Sir. Thank you po.

  • @dustintravis8791
    @dustintravis8791 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Very informative, thank you.

  • @Steventhore
    @Steventhore Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the info!

  • @julesbosch3978
    @julesbosch3978 Před 2 lety

    Well done. Thank you.

  • @SandyYager
    @SandyYager Před 19 dny

    Very informative

  • @LittleJordanFarm
    @LittleJordanFarm Před 4 lety +1

    Good information be blessed

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for watching. I just caught your channel the other day thanks to a recommendation from Whipporwhill Holler. Keep up the good work!

  • @jessaminecrisostomo7914

    Very good.

  • @ryanwierzbicki8053
    @ryanwierzbicki8053 Před 2 lety

    Good info thanks

  • @coxinator01
    @coxinator01 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for the informative & straightforward video! I was wondering how girdling affects fungal growth in the wood - like with Holly and Poplar, which develop a stain if not dried quickly after felling. If the tree dries naturally/slowly as it dies, would that reduce the fungal stain? Or checking after cutting? Any thoughts from someone who has done this a lot would be welcome!

  • @pineforest7528
    @pineforest7528 Před 2 lety +5

    I often girdle trees on my place, a dairy goat farm and woodland. Even big girdled trees usually break up slowly and without much damage to surrounding vegetation. Pines, oaks, and beeches die rapidly after girdling. A few local species respond sluggishly to girdling, though. They take forever to die. Examples of those are yellow poplars and gums. Girdle those viciously or just cut them down if they won't get hung up. Fallen trees also provide habitat.

    • @DescartesDooley
      @DescartesDooley Před rokem

      will girdling poplar in winter speed the process I wonder?

  • @annalyon8443
    @annalyon8443 Před 3 lety +2

    Detailed, precise. Love it. Girdling was a favored way for pioneers to clear land for early colonizing ancestors. Often criticized by yanKees how ugly southern poverty-stricken farms without slaves were in the 19th century...they didńt have money to pay “hands”.

  • @raciovillagechannel4950

    Good sir.. 👍

  • @mannihh5274
    @mannihh5274 Před 3 lety +7

    If you girdled the tree right, the tree starts to die off instantly; using glyphosate on top is completely useless, a waste of money and harmful to the environment (without heavy lobbyism, glyphosate would already have been banned some 10 years back).
    It's like stabbing someone you already shot.
    You missed a very important reason of girdling: if you girdle a tree in spring and cut it down in late winter, a few days before new moon, you get an extraordinary tough wood that withstands rot, fungus and insects. The oldtimers would remove the bark in several spots up to the limbs too to speed up the process. They say, constructions made from girdled pines can last 800-1000 years (I never tried that-lol).

  • @mrviniful
    @mrviniful Před 2 lety

    In eucalyptus it also works to produce shoots to propagate in cloning programs

  • @jamieyeomans3803
    @jamieyeomans3803 Před 3 lety

    you seem like the best guy to ask this. I understand girdling, My goats even had their way with a couple of cedar trees but I just recently did a double girdle with a chain saw and hatchet on a few maples i want to die for future fire would. It didn't work. So i made the chain saw cuts around the tree deeper and made sure no bark at all was left, didn't work so I did what I don't like to do and i sprayed round up in the chainsaw rings, didn't work. there is about 8 inches between chainsaw cuts and no bark between, i thought Cotton wood was relentless but something is still determined in these maples. i did the initial girdling in early February and im on Vancouver Island B.C

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před 3 lety

      A younger thin tree may only require a 1/2" deep cut vs a larger thicker tree that may need a cut of 2" or more to penetrate the cambium. This is once you are past the bark. The width of the cut should be 2".

    • @unicornrainbow222
      @unicornrainbow222 Před 10 měsíci

      It can sometimes take a year for the tree to die after girdling

  • @davidfalchek3198
    @davidfalchek3198 Před 4 lety

    Thanks, AO. Very informative and lots of context. I'm looking to try this with girdling tool and axe on some large, invasive Norway Maples. Will a tool work on a large-trunks? You mentioned girdling may not be effective on types of Maple. Could I be wasting my time? Thanks.

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před 4 lety +1

      David Falchek Girdling isn’t as effective on trees that sucker or resprout around the trunk.

  • @michaelbradley5586
    @michaelbradley5586 Před rokem

    Do you think 2 rings with a Stihl 261 10 inches apart and 1 inch deep is enough? Also can you put a number on "short order"? Thanks for the great video!

  • @ourv9603
    @ourv9603 Před 2 lety

    I learn most things from my mistakes.
    My ol' man (may he rest in peace) used to say-
    Hard Lessons are Learned Best.
    !

  • @brucemartini2288
    @brucemartini2288 Před 2 lety

    Today i did one( oak), used myy 4lb axe and spade shovel

  • @frankschwartz7405
    @frankschwartz7405 Před rokem

    I have several 100' giant pine trees, providing unwanted Winter shade. Should I girdle them?

  • @robertsullivan9501
    @robertsullivan9501 Před 3 měsíci

    i try to girdle unwanted pine trees a few each year and have good luck by just cutting two rings around the trunk and do not remove the bark between, it just seems to take longer to die, what say you about my practice?

  • @RossMortensen
    @RossMortensen Před rokem

    Have you ever heard of someone girdling a tree to allow it dry upright prior to using for a log cabin build. There is very little information on this. I plan on using Red pine next summer for a small cabin project. Any advise or comments would be appreciated.

  • @stevehamburg903
    @stevehamburg903 Před 4 lety

    I liked the video but I do have a question. Why not just use the chainsaw to take off all the bark plus the other parts that prevent the sap flow. Seems like more work than necessary to use the hand ax.

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před 4 lety

      From starting the saw to cleaving the last bit of the outer layer is 5 minutes or so. Using a lightweight hand tool is a little more precise for me that the 20" Husky, but it in the end, it is mostly preference.

  • @DonkeyBuzzard
    @DonkeyBuzzard Před 2 lety

    how large of a girdle is sufficient? would 5cm be enough for a pinetree of 40cm diametre?

  • @alexjohn2495
    @alexjohn2495 Před 4 lety

    Can I do this to a tree that is split and grew high over my house? It's only a matter of time before it breaks and is gonna mess up my house or back deck. Its too high over my steep roof but I will find a way up to cut it back in pieces but if this would work or even doing it from the base where it's split but it's gotta go

    • @isaiahshutes4230
      @isaiahshutes4230 Před 3 lety +3

      sounds risky to me, i’d rather have a healthy limb over my house than a dead one that’s more likely to snap. Call a local tree trimmer and have em quote you for it, only a couple $100 of its just the limb, vs could be more like $800 to take the whole tree depending on size

  • @papasitoman
    @papasitoman Před 3 lety

    I just saw a couple of videos where the guys did this to make the trees last longer? They said the pine sap would cover the wounds making it stronger and live longer. Am I missing something?

  • @filipdivic1302
    @filipdivic1302 Před 3 lety +3

    Dont use Herbicides in your forestry work!!! Just remove spots of bark all around the tree and in 1-2 years you will have stone hard wood.

  • @robertsprafke9376
    @robertsprafke9376 Před 3 lety

    I have saw a video recently about a somewhat lost art of girdling hardwood trees in winter by the moon phases and like a year later harvesting the most valuable and impressive wood money can buy. The wood was sold for musical instruments. They called them moon trees? Have you ran across this? Great video you have here, thanks from Arkansas.

    • @hlmw2
      @hlmw2 Před 2 lety

      Do you still have the link for that video? I watched once, now I like to watch it again, I couldn’t find it. Thank you!

    • @robertsprafke9376
      @robertsprafke9376 Před 2 lety

      @@hlmw2 let me work on it I might.

    • @robertsprafke9376
      @robertsprafke9376 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hlmw2 just search girdling trees by the moon. The video from northern is it. Good luck!

    • @joemilton7552
      @joemilton7552 Před rokem

      I have a bunch of lumber that I harvested by the blood harvest moon light, during a lunar eclipse. It was also a wolf moon at the time. This was in the darkest hours of the night, on the winter solstice. It is very, very valuable. I will sell you some, but it won't be cheap.

    • @robertsprafke9376
      @robertsprafke9376 Před rokem

      @@joemilton7552 Your a real man. I wish you luck selling the lumber it will be worth a fortune to the right person.

  • @KingdomUploader
    @KingdomUploader Před 4 lety

    Total newbie here. If i'm understanding completely, the entire tree will just fall one day or will leaves and branches begin falling off first?

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před 4 lety +2

      Cliff Notes version-Girdling cuts the flow of water/nutrients. The tree will begin dying almost immediately, with the leaves turning and dropping in short time. As it dies it also begins to dry out, from top down. Yes, eventually, as the tree rots and weakens, if left alone, it will fall.

  • @joemilton7552
    @joemilton7552 Před rokem

    why remove the bark between the cuts?

  • @musicsubicandcebu1774
    @musicsubicandcebu1774 Před 3 lety

    If I girdle halfway around will that stop the branches from growing on one side only? Thanks

    • @FreeAmerican-mm2my
      @FreeAmerican-mm2my Před 7 měsíci +1

      I would not partially girdle for that reason. You are making a tree that will be sickly, subject to disease and a potential safety risk down the road.

  • @MileyonDisney
    @MileyonDisney Před 10 měsíci +1

    Must be a girl tree, with the girdle and the pink tape. Plus, you mentioned that it could become hazardous at any moment, without notice.

  • @Goodwill_Hunter
    @Goodwill_Hunter Před 3 lety

    How long b4 you can burn it

  • @bowtie4315
    @bowtie4315 Před 4 lety

    Would this work on black locust since they sucker so bad or will it also kill off the suckers?

    • @austinroberson8
      @austinroberson8 Před 3 lety +1

      Black locust are very beautiful trees. They grow relatively straight and can be buried in soil for 100 years and not rot if prepared right. Call a local woodworker, usually they will cut those down for you for free. Do some research on BL trees before you kill them off and use them for firewood. A big black locust is a valuable tree.

    • @andrewmarc9761
      @andrewmarc9761 Před 2 lety

      @@austinroberson8 Complete nonsense. They are invasive weeds and pop up everywhere.

  • @IamFormaggio
    @IamFormaggio Před 3 lety +1

    I cut a 1/2" poison ivy vine and stuck it in a jar of round up. Sure enough 2 out of 20 hemlocks died in a hedge row. They weren't even adjoining.

  • @salmonhunter7414
    @salmonhunter7414 Před rokem

    I use to dry my firewood when it is standing

  • @bellasmom2597
    @bellasmom2597 Před 3 lety

    My late father was a logger he taught me this. And basically told me not to do it unless I wanted to kill the tree.

  • @milindkhairmode8787
    @milindkhairmode8787 Před 3 lety

    What types of trees require girdling and what does not ? from India

    • @chris2790
      @chris2790 Před 3 lety

      The kind you want to kill.

  • @chrism.8105
    @chrism.8105 Před 3 lety

    I will be needing some logs for a log home that I want to build. And I heard that girdling in the spring and falling the tree in winter they are usually a lot easier to peel. What have you heard? Thanks.

  • @donnapayton9137
    @donnapayton9137 Před 3 lety

    I live in San Diego and I want to remove the eucalyptus trees in our yard rather than paying someone to cut them down. Will girdling work for those trees?

    • @davidwyby
      @davidwyby Před 3 lety +1

      They will die, but then fall who knows when and where. I cut trees for a hobby, I’d take a look for you.

  • @anthonyt4981
    @anthonyt4981 Před 4 lety

    Is it possible to do a small ring instead of the size in the video? Don’t want people noticing the tree is girdled

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před 4 lety +1

      Anthony T Absolutely. A wide ring just better ensures the ring can’t heal/grow together. This is for your tree, right? Lol

    • @anthonyt4981
      @anthonyt4981 Před 4 lety

      @@American-OutdoorsNet Haha yeah. I'm just the corner house and my neighbors are nosy.

  • @theskylion1726
    @theskylion1726 Před rokem

    isnt girldilng also a good way to ensure you have non-green firewood for the winter? i might have this wrong but i remember reading somewhere that colonial americans would girdle trees as a way to ensure they have viable firewood by winter, for the fireplace, stove etc

    • @American-OutdoorsNet
      @American-OutdoorsNet  Před rokem +1

      Yes it is.

    • @theskylion1726
      @theskylion1726 Před rokem

      @@American-OutdoorsNet much obliged for the reply! saw this was an older video and didnt expect one, cheers for the prompt response as well!

  • @davidlee8989
    @davidlee8989 Před rokem

    Why vertical cuts?

  • @Metqa
    @Metqa Před rokem

    I have two gumball trees that are a safety hazard. The trees themselves are healthy but they drop so many gumballs seedpods that I am indanger of rolling my ankle and falling every step I take . the fressh or even the decayed ones , it's just like trying to walk on marbles. I need them gone but need to save up for tree service. In the mean time I would liek the trea to die so it stops dropping these hazard balls everywhere. This seems like the best way to kill the trees without cutting them down immediately.

  • @domr5976
    @domr5976 Před 3 lety +8

    I told my wife that I think its time we consider girdling, and for some reason I ended up sleeping on the sofa for a week.

    • @nickw101381
      @nickw101381 Před 3 lety +3

      I told my wife I've been girdling when I go to the farm. She said to stay at the farm.
      this is a Win-win

    • @fricknjeep
      @fricknjeep Před 3 lety

      them wifes i told mine i was going to cut the Thanksgiving turkey on the sawmill trip to the hospital john

  • @gettintheresafelywithpatf2869

    I don’t know about you... but if it needs a girdle, then it’s not for me! I prefer mine to have skirts!

  • @edithreardon6042
    @edithreardon6042 Před 3 lety

    Did not work with my Elm Tree. I removed all the bark the area looked like it was just light colored wood. Come back and the thing has healed the area. You could see green and dark area like bark again. The top has finally died after girdling it 2 more times. Now I have a million branches coming out of the bottom of the girdled area. So I will break all the branches off again and dig up the suckers it is now sending up. I will kill this tree. Going to try girdling it closer to the ground

    • @Kaelland
      @Kaelland Před 3 lety

      Good luck. Elm trees can be hard to kill. Try girdling lower and deeper and see how that goes.

    • @edithreardon6042
      @edithreardon6042 Před 3 lety

      @@Kaelland Sent up suckers and grew branches out of the edge of the girdling. I will be painting roundup on the leaves this spring. 5 yrs. of battling it is enough.

  • @RodCalidge
    @RodCalidge Před 4 lety +1

    Wow, its called ringing the tree and is simply the act of removing the bark so it starves to death. Not supernatural folks.

  • @waynetyson3822
    @waynetyson3822 Před 2 lety

    Girdled trees lose branches and fall. Best to log them out. Time is no excuse. Nobody knows when any tree, live or dead, is going to fall. Watch out for the lawyers. I've learned from my mistakes too. And from other people's.

  • @asmarbilalsr7769
    @asmarbilalsr7769 Před 2 lety

    This is sad to me. Poor trees. Homicidal tree dude smh