July-August 2006

Advances in Vegetation Management

Selecting the most cost-effective combination of chemicals and techniques.

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By Dan Rafter

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Perry Odom knows rain. He works in the city of Tallahassee, FL, where he serves as a forester for the city’s electric department. As anyone who’s ever spent time in the city knows, Tallahassee is one metropolis where rainy days come frequently and where residents know the value of a good umbrella.

For Odom, though, rain is more than just an inconvenience. All that water—not to mention Florida’s high humidity and persistent heat—means that Tallahassee is a perfect spot for trees to grow large and lush, and to do it quickly. All those large trees can play havoc with the city’s electric service. After all, trees, and their drooping or falling branches, cause more outages for the City of Tallahassee Electric Department than does any other nuisance. It’s essential, then, for the department to control the trees and other vegetation growing along the electric utility’s overhead distribution lines and transmission lines.

“Down here in Florida, the trees seem to grow faster than they do anywhere else,” Odom says. “They have a 10-month growing season. Some trees never go dormant.”

Odom’s department meets the challenge not by relying on just one technique to manage the vegetation growing in the utility’s public rights of way. Instead, the contractors hired by the department—crew members from Asplundh Tree Expert Co., a national vegetation-management company—turn to a variety of methods to prune trees, clear away shrubs, and prevent unwanted vegetation from sprouting. Crew members use heavy-duty mowers to clear out the rights of way, aerial buckets to trim large tree branches, tree-growth regulators to reduce the amount of new growth on existing trees, herbicides in sensitive areas where the department wants no growth at all, and other chemicals to prevent the stumps of freshly cut trees from sprouting again.

Odom and his contractors are not unusual. This integrated approach, combining both mechanical and chemical means, is becoming more common among innovative highway departments and utilities.

Municipal and utility officials face several challenges when it comes to controlling the weeds, trees, and shrubs growing along their roads or transmission lines. Utilities, for instance, are expected to provide uninterrupted, reliable service. Unpruned trees along the rights of way sometimes make this an impossibility. And unchecked growth along busy roads can lead to reduced visibility for drivers.

Combating vegetation, though, is not an easy task. Many rights of way abut private property, and homeowners and corporations may put additional pressures on clearing crews. Property owners may complain that severe cutting and trimming causes an eyesore. These same owners may not want herbicides applied near their property lines. Crews working alongside busy highways can easily place themselves in physical danger. And, just as importantly, controlling vegetation is far from an inexpensive proposition. Sharon Vore, system forester for Avista Utilities, a small investor-owned utility based in Spokane, WA, estimates that her utility spends from $4 million to $5 million a year on vegetation management.

These challenges are why many utilities and highway departments are turning to an integrated approach to manage their right-of-way vegetation. Still, for every innovative utility, there is another that refuses to experiment with anything besides regular cutting to manage vegetation. Industry pros predict, though, that integrated efforts will only grow in popularity as more users find success with such an approach.

“I think we are in a changing environment,” says Bill Massey, tree growth regulator specialist with Carmel, IN–based SePro Corp., which provides plant-growth regulators. Such an approach, Massey says, results in less cutting and expense in the future. “The problem, though, is that there is a lot of turnover in this business,” he notes. “I get someone onboard, but then he may get a promotion or move to another utility. Then someone comes in with no experience and I have to start at ground zero again. The concept is out there, though. People are using it and seeing cost impacts and the benefits it brings to their utilities. Everyone, though, wants to see how it works on his or her site. They don’t want to hear that another county over in the other half of the state has had success. They want to know what it can do for their utility. Everyone wants to run his own test.”

A Multifaceted Approach
Proof of municipal officials’ desire to take a more integrated approach to vegetation management is largely anecdotal. But those anecdotes are starting to pile up.

This makes sense. By using all the options available to them, highway departments and public utilities save precious dollars in the long run. Through the judicious use of herbicides and plant-growth regulators, these departments can lengthen the stretch of time between pruning or trimming cycles. By relying on the most advanced mowers—those featuring, for instance, saw-blade technology that is safer and more efficient than traditional rotary blades—municipal officials can cut more vegetation more quickly, shortening the amount of time crews are actually onsite.

Studying new approaches to vegetation management is so important that some highway departments work in conjunction with scientists and researchers to develop new methods. This is the case with the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet and Mitch Blair, a research scientist at the University of Kentucky. Blair is studying ways to help the state transportation cabinet better control the weeds in its roadside rights of way. Basically, Blair tests herbicides and new methods of applying them and growth regulators and then presents the findings to employees of the cabinet.

While some may see the partnership as unusual, Blair himself does not. “It’s not necessarily a new trend,” he says. “What’s been happening is that people are starting to pay more attention to matters such as herbicide selectivity. They are more interested in being able to use certain chemicals that control problem species while still letting desirable ones come through. They may want to control a broad-leaf weed but let the grasses surrounding it remain. That can be important when trying to control invasive species. You want to use chemicals that allow the desirable species to grow back while eliminating the invasive ones.”

Blair is working under a two-year grant that has been extended two additional years to study new chemical means of treating vegetation along Kentucky’s roads. The task is a big one, as the state’s rights of way, Blair says, are corridors that are prime for invasive species.

Photo: Rick Lipcsei
Controlling erosion during land-clearing operations is a priority.

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The invasive species that Blair is studying are a mixed lot, varying according to the parts of the state in which they are located. In the eastern portion of Kentucky, which features narrow rights of way on steep terrain, kudzu and Japanese knotweed are some of the more common invasive species with which highway officials have to deal. In central Kentucky, where the land is flatter and rights of way abut adjacent horse farms and small agriculture farms, municipal officials struggle to contain Johnson grass and kudzu. Western Kentucky features land that is very flat and home to larger agricultural farms. Again, kudzu is a problem here, but so are several aquatic and terrestrial plants.

Blair’s mission is to quantify how large Kentucky’s population of invasive species is and how best state officials can contain and weaken that population. “We are taking an inside-out approach,” he says. “It’s easier for land managers to control species if they know how much they have and where it is. That’s better than running around crazy in spray trucks when you don’t know how much you’re dealing with and where it is.” Next Page >

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