Dustin Everett wrote:With the increased incidence and severity of windstorms, I fear its only a matter of time before this tree is blown over or snapped, as its in savanna and is the tallest thing for ~ 100 meters in all directions. It would be great to be able to keep this one growing for decades to come.
I don't know your particular flavour of poplar. A picture would help. My long term observation suggests these general principles:
If it's in the middle of nowhere, leave it be.
If it might come down and threaten buildings, fences, take it down in a controlled way. I have a couple of four-storey monsters that I have to deal with (balsam poplar) because I know from
experience that they rot from the centre about 3' up and eventually there is only a living rind. They will fail if the right windstorm comes along, and do serious damage to my
apple and spruce trees and fences.
But here's the "fun" part about poplars (in my experience): the rootstock does not die if you take off the main stock. In fact, if you start pollarding/pruning it aggressively, it will trigger the
root system to go nuts and kick out an entire forest of clones. You may also trigger this response (deliberately or accidentally) by hassling the root system with various sharp implements.
I have the remainder of a poplar (white/trembling aspen) that I chopped off 10 years ago that keeps invading one of my terraced growing beds, and sucking out all the nutrients and moisture. It is a tenacious and unwelcome little SOB that is mighty hard to kill.
My 2c.