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Act Now — High Urgency

Storm-Damaged Trees After Ice or Wind Events
in Rochester, NY

Rochester averages more than 90 inches of snow a year, and ice storms are a regular part of winter here. Ice adds tremendous weight fast — a single glazed branch can weigh five times what it normally would. Trees in the Browncroft and Twelve Corners areas are full of large hardwoods that take serious damage in these events and need proper cleanup, not just a rough cut.

Quick Answer

Rochester ice storms can split large limbs or crack trunks outright, leaving trees that look alive but are structurally compromised. A broken branch that's still hanging is called a widow-maker — it can fall days or weeks after the storm. Damaged trees need to be assessed quickly to decide what can be saved and what needs to come down. Call (585) 565-4955 after any major ice or wind event.

Storm-Damaged Trees After Ice or Wind Events in Rochester

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • Large limbs hanging by a strip of bark and not fully detached
  • A split that runs down into the main trunk, called a co-dominant split
  • Bark stripped away in a long vertical line where a limb fell
  • The entire top of the tree snapped off or bent over
  • Fresh wood exposed on a broken branch already turning brown or black

Root Causes

What Causes Storm-Damaged Trees After Ice or Wind Events?

1

Ice loading on weak branch unions

When two trunks or large branches grow from nearly the same point, bark gets trapped between them. In Rochester's ice storms, that weak union cracks under the extra weight, splitting the tree down the middle.

The Fix

Co-Dominant Stem Cabling and Crown Reduction

A steel cable installed between the two leaders shares the load and keeps them from splitting further. Reducing the weight at the tips of both leaders lowers the force on the union.

2

Decay inside the trunk hidden before the storm

Internal decay is common in trees over 50 years old, which describes a large share of Rochester's residential trees. The outer shell looks fine until a storm applies enough force to reveal that the core was already hollow.

The Fix

Hazard Tree Removal

A tree with a hollow trunk has no reliable way to be made safe long-term. Removal is the only fix that eliminates the hazard. The sooner it's done after the storm, the less secondary damage occurs if another branch falls.

3

High winds snapping shallow-rooted trees

Lake-effect storm systems push sustained winds of 40 to 60 miles per hour across the Rochester area several times a year. Trees in clay soil with limited root depth can be pushed over completely in those conditions.

The Fix

Emergency Tree Removal and Stump Grinding

A fully uprooted or snapped tree needs to be removed in sections to avoid secondary damage. Stump grinding follows to clear the area and stop decay from spreading into the soil.

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 Ice loading on weak branch unions Decay inside the trunk hidden before the storm High winds snapping shallow-rooted trees
Tree snapped at mid-trunk, not uprooted
Tree pushed over with root ball visible above ground
Main trunk split between two leaders after ice storm
Hollow or punky wood visible at the break point
Damage happened during wind, not ice or snow loading
Tree had a V-shaped trunk union before the storm