Ok, I would still like to hear from WT on what's wrong w/the trees on the promenade, and what they intend to do about it.
That said, I was down there yesterday, and took some pics.
I tag
@DSC here as I know he's been in touch w/staff on this.....
I only walked the section from Sherbourne to Aqualuna.
But my take is that maybe 25% of the trees are in 'Good' health or better. Which is to say no visible signs of stress.
About another 30% are 'Fair' they are obviously stressed, there are some defoliated bits or premature colour-turn, but they should be able to live, and come back to health, if what's ailing them is addressed.
A goodly chunk are 'Poor', they severely stressed with lots of die-back, it's very visible to a lay person, and while they may survive another winter, they're unlikely to survive more than a year or two at their current rate of deterioration.
Finally, there are indeed several dead, or very soon to be dead trees.
Some pics, then more discussion:
Looking west on the promenade from Sherbourne Common
Looking East from the same spot:
Continued evidence of Cottony Maple Scale: (the little bits of white you see on the branch)
Overall, the evidence of scale was not as prominent as in recent years, so it seems unlikely to be a determinant factor here unless the stress of a couple of really bad y ears of it just took toll on the trees that unusual in severity.
***
Things you don't want to see what looking at a tree trunk:
The one immediately above is dead, the one above it is about to be.
But this lower one concerns me, I think the tree might catastrophically fail (which could cause serious injury) I'm not an arborist, but man does that look bad; if that were my tree, I'd take the photo and then have it cut down without even waiting on a permit.
Anyone contacting the City/WT about this, please feel free to:
a) Use my photos
b) I would suggest relating the urgency of inspection/action here to the unfortunate death of that woman in Trinity Bellwoods when a large tree branch fell on her. These need to be looked at ASAP, all of them; and the pruning cutting crew should be following right behind. There's no question there are trees that need to be removed at this point; the only question is which ones to prioritize.
If they haven't found their answer yet on the cause of the issues here, they need to bring the experts in now, before winter, and they should also have a very good look at the wood in those tree trunks after they are cut.