
Ann Arbor, Michigan, News, March 23, 2026: Residents fought to save trees from roadwork. A judge just ruled against them.
The removal of dozens of trees for roadwork just outside downtown Chelsea will move forward despite pushback and a lawsuit aimed at stopping it. On Monday, March 23, a Washtenaw County judge ruled in favor of the Washtenaw County Road Commission in a lawsuit filed by residents over the planned removal of trees on a section of Werkner Road in Sylvan Township just outside downtown Chelsea. Tree clearing will happen in advance of the two-part road improvement project on the road between Sibley Road and M-52. The road commission is gearing up to remove 42 trees from along the road right-of-way where a portion of the road needs to be widened for shoulders and drainage improvements. All of the trees to be removed are located between an entrance to a city water plant south of Ivy Road and M-52. That stretch of Werkner Road needs more extensive repairs and upgrades than in the remainder of the construction project. It is where the road will be widened by a total of 8 feet for road shoulders, including 2 feet of pavement and 2 feet of gravel shoulders on each side of the road. The road commission will begin marking trees as they finalize the timeline for removal with a contractor, the road commission announced Monday. Tree removals will cause brief traffic delays, with flaggers managing traffic. Residents Gregory Johnson and Nan Spike filed suit in February under the Michigan Environmental Protection Act (MEPA). They were seeking to prevent the removal of the trees. Spike lives on the road, and Johnson owns property there and lives nearby…
Olympia, Washington, The Olympian, March 23, 2026: Is there enough money to save this 400-year-old oak tree in Thurston County?
The City of Tumwater now has a plan to keep the 400-year-old Davis Meeker Garry Oak tree standing, almost two years after former Mayor Debbie Sullivan called to cut the tree down after a large branch fell near Old Highway 99. The plan consists of a three-year maintenance plan. However, the funds the city has set aside to care for the tree might not cover what needs to be done in the first year. The city’s Historic Preservation Commission unanimously approved the work plan for the tree on March 12. City spokesperson Jason Wettstein said the plan will be brought to the City Council in late April or early May. A Thurston County Superior Court judge ruled in December that the city can’t cut down the historic tree without prior approval from its Historic Preservation Commission…
Adirondack Explorer, March 23, 2026: How to spot old trees and old-growth forests in the Adirondacks
Old trees have a special beauty and significance. They inspire awe. When hiking through the Adirondack Park’s forests, most of which have regrown beautifully following logging in the 1800s, it is a special treat to find these ancient residents. Perhaps surprisingly, very old trees are quite easy to find. Many Adirondack logging operations were selective—involving harvest of the most valuable softwood tree species: white pine, spruce and hemlock. Hardwood trees, including beech, birch and maple, were often left in place. Even in areas where logging nearly denuded large tracts (“clear-cuts”), individual trees with blemishes, like large fire scars or burls, were often skipped. Thus, old trees can still be found growing in otherwise second-growth forests. Despite the intense logging history of the Adirondacks, some patches of old growth forests survived. Two fabulous and easy-to-access examples can be visited on the Cathedral Pines Trail near Seventh Lake and the Ampersand Mountain Trail near Middle Saranac Lake. Many old growth tracts remain undiscovered. This guide has two goals. The first is to help hikers recognize individual old trees that still stand in otherwise second-growth forests. The second is to help hikers recognize those rare tracts of forest that were never logged—the pristine old growth forests…
SuperTalk Mississippi Media, March 23, 2026: Mississippi landowners urged to be on alert for tree-killing beetles
As temperatures rise in Mississippi, landowners are urged to be on the lookout for one pesky insect known to wreak havoc on trees. Forestry specialists with Mississippi State University Extension Service warn that bark beetles could be on the hunt for trees to destroy, especially after January’s ice storm made much of the state’s land vulnerable. Of Mississippi’s five species of bark beetles, the three species of Ips engraver beetles and southern pine beetles, or SPB, raise the most concern, officials say.Pine bark beetles are known to kill stressed pine trees in Mississippi by boring into the cambium layer and feeding on vascular tissues, which disrupts water and nutrient movement. “Any of our five species of bark beetles will take advantage of stressed pines, particularly broken limbs and trunks from the recent ice damage,” MSU Extension forestry specialist Butch Bailey said…
Reasons To Be Cheerful, March 20, 2026: Can a Legendary Tree Keep Louisiana’s Coastal Lands From Slipping Away?
Bald cypress trees have loomed over Louisiana’s landscape for thousands of years, their feathery leaves offering shade from on high. In a state that contains 40 percent of the wetlands in the Lower 48, the cypress has always been a natural companion for residents. It thrives in soggy bottoms that would smother most trees, lives for hundreds of years under the right circumstances, and brings comfort to Louisianans “like warm bread at home,” as Blaise Pezold, an ecosystem restorationist, puts it. As the state tree, the cypress is “as legendary [in Louisiana] as the chestnut tree in Appalachia.” Now, it’s also helping to bring back the wetlands. Across southern Louisiana, the bald cypress is at the center of efforts to reverse the crisis of coastal land loss that has cost Louisiana 2,000 square miles of coastal land over the last century. Over the next 50 years, that figure could swell to 5,000 square miles without intervention…
Las Vegas, Nevada, KNPR Radio, March 22, 2026: Tree pruning in the desert: Norm Schilling’s guide to wind-ready trees
Las Vegas arborist Norm Schilling explains how to prune trees for desert wind, why most people remove too much, and how to spot a bad tree trimmer before it’s too late.
Here it is, March already, and I’m standing in my garden listening to the wind try to rearrange everything I’ve spent years putting in place. It’s been a strange year so far — temperatures swinging from unseasonably high to bitterly low — but the wind is the one constant. It always arrives in March, and it always makes me think about my trees. Because trees are structural beings. They don’t get to duck inside or brace themselves against a wall. They stand there and absorb every gust, and that wind stress accumulates. Which is why March, for me, is really about pruning — and about understanding the principles that separate good pruning from the kind that can actually destroy a tree. Here’s the first thing I want every Southern Nevada gardener to take to heart: In any given year, try not to remove more than about 25 to 30 percent of a tree’s total foliage. That’s your ceiling. And you should adjust it downward based on three factors — if the tree is older, if it’s diseased or stressed, or if it’s a species that already struggles in our climate. Any one of those conditions means you want to prune less. Sometimes 5 or 10 percent is plenty. Sometimes the best thing you can do is leave it alone entirely…
New York City, The Wall Street Journal, March 20, 2026: ‘The Lawrence Tree’: Georgia O’Keeffe’s Wondrously Painted Pine
In the summer of 1929, Georgia O’Keeffe discovered New Mexico. Although she had already received a good deal of acclaim, O’Keeffe had begun to feel oppressed by her life in New York with her husband, the pioneering photographer and art dealer Alfred Stieglitz. The Southwest was soon to become home, for a portion of each year, and it would also provide virtually inexhaustible subjects for her iconic paintings. The mountains, flowers and animal skulls she depicted have made her one of the most widely known and beloved 20th-century American artists. Yet one magnetic painting is atypical of that first stay in the Taos area: a striking ponderosa pine. The tree sat on the Kiowa Ranch, a property that noted arts patron Mabel Dodge Luhan had given to Frieda Lawrence, wife of the British writer D.H. Lawrence, in 1924 in exchange for the manuscript of his novel “Sons and Lovers.” “The Lawrence Tree” is a beautifully crafted painting. Trunk, branches, leaves and night sky form an intricate pattern, creating the taut balance between image and abstract form that O’Keeffe was achieving in many of her paintings of the 1920s…
Detroit, Michigan, WDIV-TV, March 20, 2026: Sterling Heights senior out $3K because manufactured home community wouldn’t remove dangerous tree
A senior in Sterling Heights is out thousands of dollars after being forced to remove a towering tree from her front yard at a manufactured housing community. She’s turning to Local 4 to get answers after publishing several stories about issues plaguing the manufactured housing community. Susanne DeRosa has owned her home in Rudgate Manor for nearly 50 years. For most of them, that tree offered more than shade, it held history. Most summer days, you’d find her granddaughter out front swinging and smiling. “A lot of me is just angry that I had to get rid of it, that nobody would take care of it, that nobody would help me out with it,” DeRosa said. Decades ago, the owner of the park at the time noticed an issue with the tree. “They noticed my tree with the branches, one was headed my way, one heading toward the neighbor,” DeRosa said… For years, it worked. “In 2019, that cable broke,” DeRosa said. After that, it wasn’t just an eyesore; it was an accident waiting to happen, one storm away from crashing onto her house. DeRosa kept track of everything, starting with management. By then, ownership of the park had changed to Sun Communities. “They said, ‘That’s your problem. It’s on your property,’” she said. “I’m sorry, but this is your property. I shouldn’t have to fix a cable you put on my tree, or your tree…”
Cheyenne, Wyoming, Cowboy State Daily, March 18, 2026: Hunters Say BLM Wiped Out Favorite Hunting Location With Tree Removal
Russian olive trees are widely regarded as an invasive species and the general rule among land management agencies is to get rid of them. But when that was done on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land along Dry Creek near Greybull, it ruined some of the best pheasant hunting in the entire region, some sportsmen said. To make matters worse, the public apparently wasn’t informed or given a chance to comment on the Russian olive removal plan before it happened, Colin Simpson of Cody told Cowboy State Daily. “It’s hard to understand why that action would be taken on public land without notification of the public beforehand,” said Simpson, a former Wyoming legislator and son of the late U.S. Senator Alan Simpson. He understands the need to control Russian olive as an invasive plant species, but thinks officials went overboard in Dry Creek…
Washington, DC, WUSA-TV, March 18, 2026: Tree safety under review after deadly crash, NPS conducting additional assessments along affected areas
The National Park Service says it is reviewing maintenance practices and conducting additional assessments after two separate crashes in which trees fell onto moving vehicles along parkways in the D.C. region, including one that killed a Frederick man. The crashes, which happened just one day apart, are raising new concerns about roadway safety and whether more could have been done to prevent them. Elik Topolosky, 39, was killed Thursday when a tree fell onto his car along the George Washington Memorial Parkway. His brother, Uri Topolosky, described the loss as sudden and devastating. “It’s a one in a trillion insanity. What are the chances a tree comes down on a highway when you are driving, and he was the only victim?” Uri Topolosky said. “It’s just so heartbreaking right now.” Uri Topolosky said his family has been searching for answers about how the incident happened and whether it could have been prevented…
Denver, Colorado, KUSA-TV, March 18, 2026: Winds topple historic Colorado tree
A massive Engelmann Spruce believed to be the oldest and tallest tree in Georgetown came crashing down Monday, destroying a 50-year-old gazebo and damaging historic park infrastructure after powerful winds swept through the state. Estimated to be 150 years old and planted when Georgetown City Park was established in 1890, the tree snapped under the force of recent high winds. The falling tree narrowly missed a historic fountain and some of Colorado’s first electric lights before striking picnic tables, historic benches, and the beloved gazebo. Longtime Georgetown resident Peter Werlin, who has lived in the area since 1964, described the moment of impact. “At 10 a.m., we were over in our house and we heard a tremendous bang,” Werlin said. For Werlin, the loss was deeply personal. “I was married in 1988, so our wedding photos were taken inside the gazebo, as are so many people from Georgetown,” Werlin said. “Everybody’s very sad about it…”
Providence, Rhode Island, WPVI-TV, March 18, 2026: Arborist urges homeowners to check trees for hidden dangers
Cleanup crews were still at work on the 100 block of Timber Springs Lane in Exton, Chester County, where a tree crashed into a home Monday night. “All of sudden it was like a bomb hit…the whole house shook and the tree fell on top of the house,” said homeowner Jacqui Mershurle. The tree narrowly missed seriously injuring her adult son, who was sleeping in his bedroom when it came down. “He said if he’d slept on the other side of the bed…he wouldn’t be here,” Meshurle said. While her son survived, another incident ended tragically. Authorities said Gilberto Senecio Feregrino was killed while cleaning up a fallen tree on Earles Lane. As he worked, a tree from a neighboring property suddenly fell, striking him. “We’re looking for mortality in the upper canopy…so dead limbs directly over our heads,” said John Rockwell Hosbach, a consulting arborist who evaluates trees and testifies in civil cases…
St. Louis, Missouri, KMOV-TV, March 16, 2026: Tree Trouble: Warning signs a tree could come down in a storm
Strong winds and stormy weather like we’ve been having lately can bring weakened trees and limbs down on property, causing thousands of dollars in damage. The best way to prevent it is to catch disease and weakness in trees before they can fall over. We went to Forest Park with Alec Hall, ISA Certified Arborist with The Davey Tree Expert Company, to talk about the warning signs that a tree may need treatment or removal. He pointed out a tree with a wound channel in the trunk. “Most certainly when you see something like this, with the heartwood exposed, it’s worth having an arborist look at it,” Hall said. “Additionally, we can see carpenter ants are starting to boar the area out,” he said, pointing out tiny holes in the heartwood. “Now carpenter ants don’t kill trees, but they can hurt the integrity of the tree by taking out the heartwood,” he explained. “Another thing we want to watch for with our trees is if we have an area where the roots seem to be maybe moving, or where the roots are may be more exposed. That’s worth keeping an eye on,” Hall said…
Charlotte, North Carolina, WCNC-TV, March 16, 2026: Who’s responsible if a tree falls on your property?
A line of strong thunderstorms took down trees and power lines Monday, leaving residents across the Charlotte area with a trail of damage to clean up.
The damage left many people wondering who is responsible for the cleanup if a tree from their neighbor’s yard falls onto their property and damages their home or belongings. The Insurance Information Institute says if a tree lands on your home, you should immediately file a claim with your insurance company. After you file the claim, an insurance adjuster may collect your neighbor’s information in a subrogation process. If this happens and your insurer is successful, you may be reimbursed for your deductible.
Attorney Gary Mauney said if you notice a tree in your neighbor’s yard is rotten, you should tell them so they can fix the issue. And if they don’t? “But it matters if you’re proving negligence against someone, then one of the ways that it would help you to prove that, of course, is if you could show that they knew that the tree was rotten or infirm, or that there was something wrong with the tree,” Mauney said…
Reno, Nevada, Gazette Journal, March 16, 2026: Reno’s least-favorite tree back in full bloom
Reno’s least favorite tree, the Bradford pear, is back in full bloom. The City of Reno’s Urban Forestry Commission cares for 2,137 Bradford pear trees. That makes it the most common publicly maintained tree in the city, at about 8% of the total inventory. That doesn’t factor in the thousands more that grow on private property in the city. And for a few weeks each spring, they’re utterly offensive to everyone within sniffing distance. The tree’s specific odor is in the nose of the beholder, although people generally agree that it’s putrid. The good news: The city has a self-imposed moratorium on planting new ones on public property. In fact, the number of Bradford pear trees on city property is down from last year’s number…
Toledo, Ohio, WTOL-TV, March 16, 2026: Tree removal companies see increase in calls after wind storms bring down hundreds of trees
Strong winds over the past couple of days have brought down trees across the area, bringing headaches for homeowners but lots of business for tree removal companies. Steve Pryba, owner of Steve’s Tree Service, said when there are big storms like this, business is non-stop. “Insane,” he said when talking about the last couple of days. “Call after call.” Pryba estimated he’s gotten at least 150 calls since Friday about downed trees, removals and cleanups. He had been at multiple sites throughout Monday, including one house where a giant tree partially fell on a house. “We got it off the house,” he said. “The guy got lucky…”
