One of the advantages of having a garden with lots of water in the ground is stump removal!
Over the last few years I’ve taken on a total of three plots at the community garden, and ended up with a lot of fruit trees. At one point I had five plum trees, three of them full sized, and I just needed to get rid of a few. The plum tree that used to be part of this stump was also too close to the greenhouse, and its roots had worked their way into the greenhouse and were sucking all the nutrients out of the ground. One of the previous gardeners also planted a number of trees too close to each other, and so some of these needed to be removed.
Anyway, I’m done cutting down trees for the moment, and on to stump removal.
The picture above is the second full sized plum tree stump I’ve removed. I learned a lot from the first tree. Most importantly is plum trees, and I hope the other fruit trees I have stumps for too, don’t appear to like their roots to be sitting in water.
Here’s a close up of the stump. Do you see how all the roots go outwards, and are at about the same level? None of the roots go down into the water table.
All I had to do was go around with a pruning shears (secateurs) for the smaller roots and a saw for the larger ones, and cut them off.
Then I could just roll the stump out of the hole. The picture above is the loose stump just sitting on the ground.






