Encyclopedia > Pollarding

  Article Content

Pollarding

Pollarding is a woodland management method of encouraging lateral branches by cutting off a tree stem two metres or so above ground level.

If pollarding is done repeatedly over the years, a somewhat expanded (or swollen) tree trunk will result, and multiple new side and top shoots will grow on it.

The main reason for this type of practice, rather than coppicing, was in wood-pastures and grazing areas where growth from the ground upwards was less practicable, due to the required area for grazing which would have been reduced by thickets of low tree growth. Pollarding above head height also protects valuable timber or poles from being damaged by browsing animals such as rabbits or deer.

Good examples of trees which are regularly pollarded are willows in areas surrounding meadows.

See also: pruning fruit trees, Shredding[?]



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Johann Karl Friedrich Rosenkranz

... 1838 and 1840 in conjunction with FW Schubert, he published an edition of the works of Kant, to which he appended a history of the Kantian doctrine. Literary and ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 25.4 ms