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I have a 30' ficus tree whose roots are starting to be invasive to plumbing. I'd like to cut down the roots and stunt their growth. How can I achieve this?

If cutting down and killing the tree is the only viable option, what is the best way to go about doing this for a tree this large?

Lorem Ipsum
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BozoJoe
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2 Answers2

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Consider using some kind of root barrier - a plastic "wall" that is placed in a trench, which is subsequently filled in.

Ed Staub
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  • Is that viable for a well established tree? For instance, if you have a 10 year old fig and the roots have spread 6 metres in each direction from the trunk but you want to contain it to a 2 metre radius, won't there be terribly thick roots to cut through? Could you put a bit more about how to do these barriers in your answer? – Lisa Dec 05 '11 at 05:51
  • @Lisa - trimming a root system to 1/9 of its original area (1/3 the radius) is likely to cripple or kill almost any tree - in which case a root barrier won't be needed. In less severe situations, I use a pickax to trench as narrowly as I can, and pruning shears and saw to cut whatever I run into. Don't try to lever roots up with a pickax unless it's really easy - you'll just hurt your back. I don't use root barrier myself - I just go back with a pickax as needed. – Ed Staub Jan 09 '12 at 04:56
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the way it says to use root killers by drilling a hole in the center and one from the side is good but I don't put the killer in I just start a fire in the center hole. it will burn all the down to the roots and the roots will rot in sbout 1 year.