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Pollarding of the adjacent willows controls light and the water levels.
Are you aware why pollarding, coppice on a stick, was used in other locations?
Repeated pollarding has shaped the growth patterns of centuries-old trees.
Pollarding has now largely replaced polling as the verb in the forestry sense.
Pollarding is also used in urban forestry in certain areas for reasons such as tree size management, safety and health concerns.
Pollarding is also sometimes used for shrubs that bear colorful new stems, since it assures a good supply of young wood.
Pollarding has its esthetic and its practical sides.
In addition, the Crown's right to venison was terminated, and pollarding was no longer allowed, although grazing rights continued.
Many of the trees have died in recent decades, apparently as a result of the abandonment of traditional pollarding and grazing practices.
Although rarely used as a street tree owing to its shape, it can be surprisingly tolerant of urban air pollution, constricted growing conditions and severe pollarding.
Pollarding is a pruning system in which the upper branches of a tree are removed, promoting a dense head of foliage and branches.
Pollarding of trees and stacking of branches into a circular or oval space comprising 1/6 to 1/10 of the area cleared.
Pollarding, which involves repeated cutting of branches at head height, and was originally practised mainly for firewood, is to be reintroduced, along with experimental grazing of ponies, pigs and cattle.
It involves coppicing or pollarding of standing trees in a primary or secondary growth Miombo woodland, stacking of the cut biomass, and eventual burning of the cut biomass in order to create a thicker layer of ash than would be possible with in situ burning.