i saw signs of black inside the 20" or so, but i assumed it was black from the chainsaw
https://flic.kr/p/2jspZVx
https://flic.kr/p/2jspZVx
The pine look like this here:ughhhh its always something. Seeing a dead tree within striking distance is very unnerving, i'ts like I can't look away (sounds like for you too).
how big around are these things? Do they die from top down?
Here in Georgia, the rule is “where it lays, that’s who pays”.That's actually not true. At least explained by my insurance company. If my neighbors tree falls and lands on my house. It's on me. Actually had a top come out of the neighbors tree during a storm.
If they cut the tree and damage my property, the liability is on them.
Had a neighbor who was at her brothers house and had a tree land on her vehicle during a storm. Her vehicle insurance had to cover it. Her brother tried to run it through his home owners insurance to help his sister out and the claim was denied.
Neighbor had a tree fall on my fence and tried to claim it on his insurance. Neighbors insurance told him that my insurance would take care of it. We happened to have our homeowners insurance from the same company.Here in Georgia, the rule is “where it lays, that’s who pays”.
Even if the tree is dead and you get a certified letter from a neighbor expressing concern, most of the time that does not stand up in court. Two years ago, I had five large pecan trees go down across my neighbors fence during a hurricane. It was a lot of damage. His insurance had to pay because mine wouldn’t. The damage was on his property. As bad as I felt, I wasn’t about to cough up $5,000 for the fence, tree removal and some other things that were damaged. I had to clean up the damage on the other side from trees that fell from my other neighbor onto my property.