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Improper Past Pruning Causing Tree Decline
in Rochester, NY

A lot of trees in Rochester's older neighborhoods were topped by utility crews or well-meaning homeowners over the past 30 to 40 years. Topping creates large wounds the tree can't seal. Decay moves in, and 10 to 20 years later the tree has hollowed-out sections no one can see from the outside. Houses in the Maplewood and Charlotte neighborhoods have a lot of these trees.

Quick Answer

Topping a tree — cutting large branches back to stubs — was common in Rochester through the 1980s and 1990s, and many of those trees are now showing serious decay. Stub cuts don't heal cleanly, and rot moves down into the trunk from every one of them. Corrective pruning can slow the decline, but a tree that was topped badly may never fully recover. Call (585) 565-4955 to find out where your tree stands.

Improper Past Pruning Causing Tree Decline in Rochester

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • Multiple large stubs scattered through the crown with no branch growing from them
  • Clusters of thin, fast-growing shoots coming off thick stubs — called water sprouts
  • Visible hollows or soft spots near old cut locations on the trunk
  • A crown that looks bushy and uneven rather than structured
  • Heavy bark ridges or swollen tissue around old pruning wounds that never closed

Root Causes

What Causes Improper Past Pruning Causing Tree Decline?

1

Topping cuts leaving large stubs

When a large branch is cut in the middle instead of back to a proper union, the stub dies. The tree can't seal over a wound that wide, and decay fungi move in from the exposed wood. In Rochester, where trees face wet winters and freeze-thaw cycles, that decay progresses faster than in drier climates.

The Fix

Corrective Pruning to Lateral Branches

Dead stubs are removed back to the nearest healthy lateral branch. This won't undo the decay already there, but it stops new entry points from forming and redirects the crown's energy into better-placed branches.

2

Flush cuts removing the branch collar

The branch collar is a slightly swollen ring where a branch meets the trunk. That collar contains tissue the tree uses to seal over a cut. Removing it — which happens when someone cuts flush with the trunk — leaves a wound that stays open permanently.

The Fix

Wound Assessment and Crown Monitoring

Old flush cuts can't be undone, but an arborist can assess how deep the decay has gone using a probe or a small drill. That tells you whether the tree is still structurally sound or getting close to failure.

Self-Diagnosis

Which Cause Applies to You?

Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.

What You're Seeing Topping cuts leaving large stubs Flush cuts removing the branch collar
Crown has multiple large blunt stubs with no live growth at tips
Dozens of thin water sprouts growing from thick branch stubs
Old cuts are flush with the trunk with no raised collar tissue visible
Soft or hollow areas on the trunk directly behind old cut locations
Tree was clearly cut hard back at some point and regrew unevenly