That's how I understand it Alastair.
Cheers
Trevor
On Wednesday, January 20, 2021, 01:31:55 PM GMT, Alastair Durkin
<adurkin@xxxxxxxxxx.gov.uk> wrote:
I'll probably get shot down in flames here by colleagues who deal with
subsidence more often than me, but for 'heave' to occur in this specific
instance my understanding is that a persistent soil moisture deficit would
already need to have been in existence when the bungalow was built, and the
foundations not taken account of that. If subsidence then went on to occur,
through the continued growth of the tree, then there would be a possibility
of the ground 'recovering' beyond the original build level eventually
resulting in 'heave' (although technically still recovery I suppose). With
that in mind, it might be very difficult to predict in this circumstance.
There will certainly be recovery if the tree is felled you'd think, but
whether the recovery takes it past the original build level.......
Alastair
-----Original Message-----
From: uktc-request@xxxxxx.tree-care.info <uktc-request@xxxxxx.tree-care.info>
On Behalf Of "theapsy@xxxxxx.com"
Sent: 20 January 2021 12:42
To: UK Tree Care <uktc@xxxxxx.tree-care.info>
Subject: Re: Heave Risk Assessment
Hi Jim,
The Oak is probably about 70-80 years older than the (subsidence damaged)
bungalow.
I was worried about recommending the Oak to be felled - before checking
whether or not heave might occur after the expected recovery.
Cheers
Trevor
On Wednesday, January 20, 2021, 12:35:52 PM GMT, Jim Quaife
<jq@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.co.uk> wrote:
When subs has occurred the removal of the offending tree is usually
recommended by insurers as the correcting action.
The mechanism that causes heave is different to subsidence - the reverse of
subs is re-wetting.
I don't know the circs of your case but don't get the two confused.
Jim
-----Original Message-----
From: uktc-request@xxxxxx.tree-care.info
[mailto:uktc-request@xxxxxx.tree-care.info] On Behalf Of "theapsy@xxxxxx.com"
Sent: 20 January 2021 11:28
To: UK Tree Care
Subject: Heave Risk Assessment
Hi All,
Does anyone know a good firm who undertakes heave risk assessments?
A bungalow has subsided, a mature Oak (much older than the bungalow) growing
a few metres away on heavy clay soil is almost certainly the main cause, but
I need to check on the risk of heave before advising further.
Cheers
Trevor
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