2017 Tree Inspection Workshops with Frank Rinn

After the huge success of the 2016 workshops MTOA are pleased to announce more dates for 2017

These are hands-on class’s so delegate numbers are limited.

When: 27th and 28th September 2017

Where: Midland Arts Centre, Cannon Hill Park, Birmingham

 

  • How can you tell if a tree is safe?
  • Do you want to make better tree assessments, increase your knowledge of tree biomechanics, wood decay and diagnostic tools?
  • Is increasing the precision and accuracy of your inspections and reports important?

Back-to-back workshops with Frank Rinn, inventor of the RESISTOGRAPH and Tomograph and world famous instructor on tree inspection can help you to be a better municipal arborist.

MTOA is bringing Frank Rinn in from Heidelberg, Germany just for these advanced workshops. Classroom topics will include: wood anatomy, tree biomechanics, the effects of pruning and cabling, and possibilities and limitations of technical inspection methods. Outdoor hands-on field time with Frank and his assistants will include: resistance drilling, sonic tomography and sonic root plate assessment.

Added Bonus:

Everyone registering the Day 1 Tree Safety Workshop will receive an ArboMech-software licence (WIN, ANDROID, or MacOSX). This software allows to determine how strong a cross-section is weakened by a defect and this can be done on a PC/Notebook, tablet, or smartphone (at the tree).

Everyone registering for the Day 2 Advanced Tree Safety Workshop will receive an ArWiLo-software licence (WIN, ANDROID, or MacOSX). This software allows to determine the impact of pruning on wind-load reduction and this can be done on a PC/Notebook, tablet, or smartphone (at the tree).

Registration Fees:
Day 1: £85 MTOA members (£135 non-member)
Day 2: £85 MTOA members (£135 non-member)
Both Days: £150 MTOA members (£225 non-member)
(Seven day cancellation policy)

 

Contact the MTOA office to register your place now, these will sell out early. enquiries@mtoa.co.uk 

National Tree Officer’s Conference 2016 – Call for Papers Now Open

ltoa    Inst-charter-fores        

Click here to download information

 

National Tree Officer’s Conference 2016 – Call for Papers Now Open

 

2 February 2016

 

The first National Tree Officer’s Conference is being organised by the London Tree Officers Association (LTOA) and the Municipal Tree Officers Association (MTOA)

and facilitated by the Institute of Chartered Foresters (ICF). The conference will provide an opportunity for tree officers to present to their colleagues on the latest research, best practice and innovation in different areas of local authority arboricultural work.

The conference will be held on the 9th November 2016, at the Oakengates Theatre, Limes Road, Telford, TF2 6EP (www.theplacetelford.com). Conference bookings will open later in the year at www.charteredforesters.org/tree-officers-conference

The submission period for abstracts is now open and will close on the 14th April 2016.

Abstracts are to be a maximum of 500 words and will be considered on a wide range of subjects that are relevant to the remit of a tree/woodland/planning officer. (Abstracts will only be considered from local government (LG)-employed tree officers and woodland officers.) For guidance, the following subject headings are suggested:

  • Tree strategies/policy/tree database innovation
  • Biosecurity
  • Tree risk management
  • Case studies – tree projects and or best practice
  • Tree related planning and enforcement case studies
  • Raising the profile of trees with the LG setting/working effectively with Politicians
  • Tree planting
  • Working well with the public/tree groups/forums/friends of groups.

 

Abstracts will be reviewed by a selection committee (Russell Horsey MICFor, Matthew Seabrook, Al Smith MICFor, Jake Tibbetts) and selection will be based on overall quality, appropriateness, focus, and the practical nature of material and appeal to a tree officer audience.We look forward to seeing you at the conference, and receiving a wide range of abstracts.Submissions by email to: Becky Porter, London Tree Officers Association executive.officer@ltoa.org.uk.

 

AGM for 2016 cancelled to 8th February 2017

Following a number of set backs the Board of Directors have agreed to cancel this years AGM and Seminar day and have resolved to reschedule the event for 8th February 2017.

Whilst we make every effort to maintain current awareness, legeslative change and revisions in documents and standards we all refer to as part of our respective jobs, it is very difficult trying to compile training days and field trips whilst still undertaking our daily roles as Tree Officers and similar. Please be assured that the BoD are working towards constructing a training and seminar day within the next few months and hope to bring news of this soon, so please keep checking in with us to see whats new and any dates that have been set.

As a voluntary organisation we are constantly looking for people to get involved and would appeal to anyone who thinks they may have something to contribute to our cause to get in touch and we will gladly take a look at any suggestions you may have or offers of your time to contribute to the MTOA. Please feel free to get in touch.

Austerity is affecting us all and now, more than ever we should be pulling together and advising one another of initiatives and ways of saving money or changing the way we do things to secure not only our jobs but the trees within our respective care and communities. We should all be ‘hooking up’ with the ‘health and wellbeing’ departmwents within our councils and boroughs given the positive affect that trees have on our mental and physical wellbeing.

So please get in touch with any ideas, comments or offers to assist, always welcome.

 

Chair’s Response to BS 8545 Consultation

The Municipal Tree Officers’ Association is a not for profit organisation dedicated to supporting municipal arboriculturists and urban foresters in the planting and care of trees and associated green infrastructure. Currently we have a membership of seventy eight local authorities and approximately two hundred individual members. The MTOA fully supports the ideas behind the draft BS 8545, 2013 (Trees from the nursery to independence in the landscape), the actual content and recommends that the draft is adopted as it is by the British Standards Institute, subject to minor technical changes required following the consultation exercise.

Currently there is a lack of in-depth guidance on establishing standard and larger sized trees in the UK and it is clear from government produced “Trees In Towns 2” report and anecdotal evidence that a significant number of standard and semi-mature trees that are planted in the UK never live long enough to become established in the landscape, let alone grow onto to maturity.

The UK faces severe climate change related problems and one of the solutions in helping to mitigate against the worst affects of climate change in our urban areas is to ensure that there is sufficient tree canopy cover and subsequent leaf area. To ensure that we have sufficient canopy cover, a significant number of trees will have to be planted in the near future. To ensure these trees become established, we need this British Standard to give up-to-date guidance to all professionals involved in planting trees to ensure that these planted trees not just survive bit grow on to become established mature trees.

Local Authority Tree and Landscape Officers are involved in assessing landscape schemes submitted for planning application development sites. Most of these schemes involve the planting of standard or larger sized trees. It is clear from the schemes submitted that there is a widespread lack of knowledge in the landscape industry on how trees grow, their soil and rooting volume requirements and the space required for the above ground parts of the tree. In addition planting and aftercare maintenance specifications are frequently not fit for purpose. Therefore it is not a surprise that so many planted trees do not survive, let alone grow onto independence in the landscape. This makes this draft British Standard so important, as there is a clear need for guidance on the subject.

With an influx of new imported tree diseases becoming established in the UK over the last fifteen years and even more becoming established on the continent, it is clear that the threat to both our urban rural tree populations is so significant that all steps to prevent new tree pests becoming established in the UK should be adopted. Thus, the MTOA fully supports the inclusion in the draft of the recommendation that all young trees produced abroad and imported into the UK by British nurseries for growing on are subject to a growing season quarantine period before being moved off the nursery. The MTOA would like to see this introduced not just for young trees, but for all trees imported in to the UK.  As has been shown with oak processionary moth and ash dieback, the direct importation of trees to be planted out in the landscape raises the risks of direct importation of non-native pests and diseases to an intolerable level and thus all imported trees should be subject to the same full growing season quarantine period as that proposed for young trees.