How we keep Yorba Linda tree protection setups out of the fine zone
We get called out in Yorba Linda when a project needs a fence line near mature trees, and the clock’s already ticking. I remember a wind-whipped job in 2006 when a fence line shifted fast, and that lesson stuck with us: tree protection isn’t just about putting up panels, it’s about placing them where roots, soil, and access all stay protected. In neighborhoods like Yorba Linda Country Club, Vista Del Verde, and Fairmont Hill, we lay out the zone, tighten the hardware, and keep the crew moving without chewing up the root area. We also tie tree protection into SWPPP dust compliance when the site needs extra control. That’s how we keep the city happy and the trees standing.
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We stake tree-protection fence lines before the first post goes in, because roots don’t forgive shortcuts and inspectors don’t either.
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We use our root-zone calculation and tree protection zones setup to keep crews outside the drip line and off compacted soil.
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We add wind load resistance and concrete steel bases when Yorba Linda wind kicks up near Vista Del Verde or along the open stretches by Rim Crest Trailhead.
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We coordinate the fence layout with SWPPP dust compliance so a tree buffer and site controls work together instead of fighting each other.
