Gardening tips
Intruding tree roots and how to remove them
Intruding tree roots and how to remove them
Gardening tips
Tree roots rarely rate a mention in gardens until they begin to intrude into areas that they shouldn't. Places like your sewer pipes, under neighbouring fences and lifting pathways is when they become nuisances. While you may have enjoyed the tree for aeons, or inherited it when you bought the property, suddenly it becomes a problem when they expose their roots or begin rising to the surface.
The best defence is always preparation. Selecting trees that have a
history of shallow or exposed roots is fine provided you know where
they can go in the garden without disturbing infastructure. Keeping
them away from fences, walls, paths, septic tanks and sewer pipes is
all common sense but easy to miss in the excitement of planting a new
tree.
Once the problem of exposed tree roots has surfaced (pun intentional!)
it can be just a matter of trimming some of them in order to keep the
issue under control. If ignored the problems may become exacerbated and
in some situations begin to cost you enormously.
How to remove tree roots
The best way to stop intruding tree roots is to stop them in their
tracks as soon as you notice their growth path. Then it's a simple
matter of cutting them back so that won't continue the track they're
currently heading. Obviously, cutting tree roots back to the trunk is
going to to prove problematic, especially if you plan removing one side
completely.
Tree roots are the anchor for the tree's trunk so removing any of them
is a balancing act - literally - and can be fraught with peril should
you make the wrong move. First, start by digging a trench 1ft in
(provided it's a large tree) from the tree's drip-line (where the
leaves end). This should uncover any serious threats and at this point
it is safe enough to trim the tree's roots without harming the tree
itself.
While the trench is still open it may help to install some barrier that
will impinge on the tree root's further growth. You may even want to
consider realigning any pipes that the roots are headed for or paths
that might be in its future trajectory.
Removing tree roots is not a solve-all solution. Trees have a habit of
growing, as do their roots, and over time the tree will continue its
growing journey even where it was cut back. Therefore, cutting its
roots will be an exercise that's required every few years or so just to
keep them under control.
Whatever you do, never cut tree roots back to the trunk. This will make
it completely unstable and susceptible to disease, or death and could
result in it toppling over and doing even more damage. If the only way
to fix the problem is to cut the roots that close to the trunk then it
might be time to call in the professionals to remove it altogether.