Do all Villagers want treeless yards Do all Villagers want treeless yards - Talk of The Villages Florida

Do all Villagers want treeless yards

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Old 11-29-2013, 02:35 PM
OldManTime OldManTime is offline
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Default Do all Villagers want treeless yards

It seems that many villagers in the new districts bought there homes at a premium if there was one tree on the lot.

This was not necessarily the case when the OBG (Historic District) was developed by Harold Schwartz, where historic trees are all over the place.

Trees in florida are sacred, as well as water, but too many choose to cut down perfectly healthy trees, even chop them up and leave a trunk on there lot because they don't want to rake the leafs, and most are done by unlicensed not insured fly by night (mostly Saturday & Sunday)

I am not a tree hugger by all means, but if this continues we will look like a desert.

Villagers should know they are subject to fines for violating there deed restrictions.
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Old 11-29-2013, 02:41 PM
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Sometimes older trees have to be cut down or largely trimmed back because they are diseased, or they are leaning against the house, or their roots are heaving the driveway concrete. In our neighborhood, almost everyone has large newer trees planted 7-8 years ago and the streets are now graced with whispering palms.
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Old 11-29-2013, 02:47 PM
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I bought where I can see trees but have none in the yard. yes I miss walking under them and shade. and no I don't want one in my yard:
raking leaves
limbs thru roof
mold on shingles
roots through the driveway
acorns and squirrels....
no yard trees for me, thanks.
I go to the park and walk under the majesty of bearded oaks. and i'm thankful for them.
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Old 11-29-2013, 04:05 PM
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I agree with what Kitty says. I don't like leafy trees. All they represent to me is falling leaves that need to be raked, bird poopies, and a dirty driveway. I do however love palm trees.

If I see a house for sale with a tree on the property, I don't even bother looking at the house. All I see is a tree falling thru the roof during a storm.
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Old 11-29-2013, 04:28 PM
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No, I don't want tree-less yards. It is a matter of living style, and a tree for me represents the inner connection to the nature. A lot of native trees in Florida have no falling leafs, some do, but just a couple and all this kind of trees have deep roots (well it has not to be trees like in Edison's mansion in Fort Myers which consume a half of an acre for one tree- but there are no falling leafs).
Yes, I planning to have some palm trees in my yard around a little fountain.
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Old 11-29-2013, 05:09 PM
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Personally, don't care for the Oaks or magnolias but do want a couple of palms in my front yard. To me it just isn't Florida without a palm tree. But to each his own.
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Old 11-29-2013, 05:16 PM
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I am somewhere around I hate, loathe and despise palm trees; love oaks even with all of their problems; while I love evergreens, really don't get the Florida connection (except for the scraggly ones growing by swamps); could really not care one way or the other about magnolias.

But I was under the impression that every yard had to have at least one tree in the front. Has this changed south of 466A?
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Old 11-29-2013, 05:22 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kittygilchrist View Post
I bought where I can see trees but have none in the yard. yes I miss walking under them and shade. and no I don't want one in my yard:
raking leaves
limbs thru roof
mold on shingles
roots through the driveway
acorns and squirrels....
no yard trees for me, thanks.
I go to the park and walk under the majesty of bearded oaks. and i'm thankful for them.
I agree with this poster's reasoning 100% ,reason for moving to villages is to be as far away from trees as possible!!Had heavy treed lot, nothing but work, cleaning gutters, worry about trees falling on your home etc, work work work,etc.
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Old 11-29-2013, 05:34 PM
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I suspect that the pivotal issue concerning lots with/without trees has more to do about the history of the use of the land before being developed.

I never heard that every home being built must have one tree in the front of the yard. I believe if there are any trees in the front yard they were either there as the home was being built or the homeowner paid to have it planted

Perhaps homeowners new and prospective ought to learn what the property was used for before building a house on it.

A native here told me the land in my area was used to raise cattle and was generally dry. he knows because he use to hunt in Sumter County
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Old 11-29-2013, 05:40 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kittygilchrist View Post
I bought where I can see trees but have none in the yard. yes I miss walking under them and shade. and no I don't want one in my yard:
raking leaves
limbs thru roof
mold on shingles
roots through the driveway
acorns and squirrels....
no yard trees for me, thanks.
I go to the park and walk under the majesty of bearded oaks. and i'm thankful for them.
Try planting a Crepe Myrtle.
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Old 11-29-2013, 05:46 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by justjim View Post
Personally, don't care for the Oaks or magnolias but do want a couple of palms in my front yard. To me it just isn't Florida without a palm tree. But to each his own.
Magnolias are the worst. Not only are they bad for the owner, they're bad for the neighbors. On a windy day the leaves fly all over the neighborhood. I have seen some of them get cut down for just that reason. Good riddance!
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Old 11-29-2013, 06:02 PM
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[QUOTE=rubicon;788710]I suspect that the pivotal issue concerning lots with/without trees has more to do about the history of the use of the land before being developed.

I never heard that every home being built must have one tree in the front of the yard. I believe if there are any trees in the front yard they were either there as the home was being built or the homeowner paid to have it planted

Rubicon - drive around south of 466A and you will see every yard has a circle in front with a tree planted - unless the homeowner was lucky enough to remove the circle or expand it to a different shape. Drives me nuts 'cause it looks so unnatural.
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Old 11-29-2013, 06:11 PM
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I had over 300 trees on my acre up north and I spent way too many hours raking leaves. I have a palm tree, a crepe myrtle and some big tree in my back yard that drops leaves all over every fall. I'd love to have it taken out but I'm told that I have to get permission and that it has to be diseased or posing a danger to my house.

Trees make a mess and cause mold on your house because of the lack of sunlight.
I especially detest those horrible looking live oaks that everyone seems so gaga over. I don't get it. The make the neighborhoods look terrible and they drop all that crap every where.
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Old 11-29-2013, 07:21 PM
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NO!
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Old 11-29-2013, 07:45 PM
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This is the entire reason I bought north of 466. The southern sections look like a desert. It's just ugly to me. I would never buy where I have to wait years to sit outside and see a tree.
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