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Dead or Dying Branches Hanging Over Your House
in Springfield, MO
Dead branches break off faster than you think, especially after the ice storms that hit the Ozarks every few winters. Springfield gets hard freezes followed by quick thaws, and that cycle weakens limbs that already look bad. If a heavy branch comes down on your roof or power line, the damage is a lot worse than the cost of trimming it now.
Quick Answer
Dead branches hanging over your home are a real hazard in Springfield, where storms roll through fast and without much warning. The fix is removing those limbs before they come down on their own. A certified trimmer can cut them back to healthy wood safely. Do not wait until the next storm to deal with this.
Telltale Signs
Warning Signs to Watch For
- Branches that have no leaves in spring or summer when the rest of the tree has leafed out
- Bark peeling away from a limb or the limb looks gray and dry
- Small dead twigs snapping off and landing in your yard after mild wind
- A branch hanging at a weird angle, like it is already partially broken
- Cracks or splits where a large limb connects to the trunk
- Fungus or shelf mushrooms growing on a limb
Root Causes
What Causes Dead or Dying Branches Hanging Over Your House?
Storm and Ice Damage
Springfield averages around 4 to 6 ice storm events every decade, and a single heavy ice load can crack limbs that still look attached. The branch stays up there held by a sliver of wood and bark, then lets go on a calm day with no warning.
The Fix
Hazard Limb Removal
A trimmer cuts the damaged limb back to the nearest healthy branch union or to the trunk. Cutting to the right spot helps the tree seal over the wound instead of rotting from the cut inward.
Disease or Fungal Infection
Oak wilt and hypoxylon canker both show up in Greene County trees and kill large limbs from the inside out. By the time you see dead wood on the outside, the rot has usually been working for a season or two.
The Fix
Dead Wood Pruning and Disposal
Infected limbs need to be cut off and hauled away, not left on site. Leaving diseased wood near the tree or chipping it on the spot can spread spores to nearby healthy trees.
Root Stress from Drought
Springfield summers regularly hit stretches of 10 or more days without rain, and the clay soil here dries out hard and pulls away from roots. Trees under drought stress drop limbs on purpose to reduce the amount of canopy they have to feed, and those dropped limbs often start at the top.
The Fix
Crown Cleaning and Deep Watering Plan
Removing the stressed dead wood stops further breakage and gives the tree a better chance to recover. Pairing that with a slow watering schedule around the drip line helps roots stabilize before the next dry stretch.
Self-Diagnosis
Which Cause Applies to You?
Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.
| What You're Seeing | Storm and Ice Damage | Disease or Fungal Infection | Root Stress from Drought |
|---|---|---|---|
| Limb cracked at the base but still attached | |||
| Dead wood only at the very top of the tree | |||
| Shelf fungus visible on the dead limb | |||
| Several large limbs came down during last winter's ice | |||
| Dark staining or oozing under the bark where the limb meets the trunk |
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