Snags, Habitat Trees and Lively Stubs
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
1M ago
Do you ever wonder what you can do to enhance wildlife habitat on your urban plot? Creating or, better yet, preserving homes and food for the animals can be pretty painless and as easy as leaving trees standing! Nature knows what to do with a dead tree ..read more
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Norway Maple - Avoid Planting this Invasive Tree
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
3M ago
Many love Norway Maple trees for their large size, rapid growth, and fall color. However, this fast-growing invasive species often develops structural problems and must be watched and cared for closely. And truthfully, native sugar or red maples actually display much brighter colors! Learn more about special considerations property owners should consider for these invasive and problematic trees ..read more
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Norway Maple - A Tree to Avoid Planting
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
3M ago
Many love Norway Maple trees for their large size, rapid growth, and fall color. However, this fast-growing invasive species often develops structural problems and must be watched and cared for closely. And truthfully, native sugar or red maples actually display much brighter colors! Learn more about special considerations property owners should consider for these invasive and problematic trees ..read more
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Five Proactive Steps to Avoid Tree Storm Damage
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
7M ago
Storm damage to trees, homes and other structures is one of the most frequent concerns for owners of both residential and commercial property. It happens! And it can be scary. In the storm yesterday, there was significant damage all over Southern Wisconsin, including downed limbs, trees, and power lines. There was property damage in a number of areas, but fortunately no people were harmed. This high-wind event was overwhelming, but it will all be okay.  It’s completely understandable if you want to jump into tree removal as a method of pro-active storm protection. However, we would like t ..read more
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Chip Truck Chips are the Best for Your Yard
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Nick Wilkes
2y ago
Chip Truck Chips (CTC) are the wood chips that come from a chip truck of a conscientious tree company (not just any dump truck). We want to help homeowners understand why truck chips are so great for your landscape and garden projects. Shredded bark mulch is a byproduct of the lumber industry, which is ground up and stockpiled and then distributed to landscape maintenance and supply companies. Chip Truck Chips are superior to shredded bark if you consider the effect on your soil and plants, the environmental impact, and more. At Heartwood we have set up a system to deliver free (yup, free!) tr ..read more
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How to Buy the Right Tree
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
2y ago
Planting a tree should be an easy decision. Ask yourself a few key questions will help you to decide what tree to plant and where to plant it. #1 Choosing the Tree Planting Location Where do I want a tree? Trees can help with myriad landscape goals for the average American backyard. For example, trees can: provide shade for a structure or play area create privacy protect your yard from prevailing winds, tie together a planting act as a visual centerpiece in your landscape provide seasonal color (spring blossoms, summer fruit, fall foliage) create interesting winter structure A ..read more
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Repurposing Trees Removed from UW Arboretum
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
3y ago
Pruning and removing trees naturally results in a lot of wood scrap. Since 2012, Heartwood has strived to save every usable piece of wood possible. Our efforts started with saving dead branches from oaks to burn in the wood stove, and we are now salvaging logs on most medium to large trees we remove. This winter we took the next step and bought logs salvaged from oak savanna restoration projects in the UW-Arboretum.       We teamed up with Jon Roach from Living Wood Creations to purchase this stack of pine, oak, cherry, and walnut from the UW Arboretum in Dec 2021 ..read more
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Why Arborists Make the Best Tree Planters
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
4y ago
 What are Your Tree Planting Goals? When you a buy a tree to have planted in your yard what are the motivations for making that purchase?  Are you looking for a “statement tree” right out of the box?  Are you looking for a tree that future generations can hang a tree swing in?  Are you trying to create shade on the south side of your house or patio? Being on both the removal and planting side of the tree equation affords Heartwood arborists lots of time to think about the long-term motivations for planting trees.  Personally, my favorite planting is one that will shade ..read more
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Don't Rake Yard Leaves, They are FREE Fertilizer!
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Brent Valentine
4y ago
  Being a vocal anti-lawn person, I’m completely biased on the topics of leaf raking, leaf composting, and yard waste management. I feel our yards need fewer synthetic inputs and a lot more native inputs, in the form of leaf litter.  A city parkscape with loads of free fertilizer covering its grass. Beautiful! Why Do People Rake Leaves? When you don’t know how to do something, what is the first thing you do?  Well, I’m a DIY type of person (to a fault), so I go to my phone and thumb in “how to _____”. Google knows. If you ask the internet “Why do we rake leaves?” the predominan ..read more
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Swamp White Oak (Quercus bicolor)
Heartwood Tree Care Blog
by Aaron Suiter
5y ago
An Uncommon Oak with Telltale Leaves As its name implies, the swamp white oak is a lowland tree, often found in areas subject to periodic flooding, and on the edges of swamps and poorly drained meadows. Unlike white oaks (Q. alba) and burr oaks (Q. macrocarpa), which occur in large stands in the forests and oak savannahs of the Midwest, swamp white oaks are usually found growing singly amongst forests dominated by other species. They are thus relatively rare, encountered much less often than their oaken brethren. Although less common, swamp white oaks are easy to spot, even for novices. The La ..read more
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