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Overgrown Tree Blocking Light and Gutters
in Livonia, MI

A lot of Livonia lots, especially in subdivisions built in the 1960s, have mature silver maples and cottonwoods that were planted when they were small. Those trees are now 50 to 80 feet tall on lots that cannot support them. They drop so much debris that gutters clog two or three times a year, and the shade keeps the north side of the house permanently damp.

Quick Answer

Trees that have outgrown their space in a Livonia yard drop leaves, seeds, and branches into gutters every fall and spring. Clogged gutters let water back up under your roof edge and rot the wood there. The fix is either trimming the tree back hard or removing it entirely if it is too large for the lot. Waiting another season just fills your gutters again and the rot gets worse.

Overgrown Tree Blocking Light and Gutters in Livonia

Telltale Signs

Warning Signs to Watch For

  • Gutters are overflowing during rain even though you cleaned them recently
  • Moss or algae is growing on the shaded side of your roof
  • Your yard has dead grass patches directly under the canopy
  • Seedlings from the tree are sprouting in your gutters
  • Branches are rubbing or touching the roof shingles
  • The north side of the house stays wet and dark most of the year

Root Causes

What Causes Overgrown Tree Blocking Light and Gutters?

1

Fast-Growing Species on Small Lots

Silver maples, which were planted widely in Livonia subdivisions in the 1960s and 1970s, grow fast and drop a large volume of leaves and helicopter seeds twice a year. On a small lot, there is no way to keep up with the debris without removing or heavily trimming the tree.

The Fix

Full Tree Removal

Once the tree is down and the stump is ground out, you stop the debris cycle permanently. Replanting a smaller species suited to the lot size is the long-term fix.

2

Branches Grown Over the Roofline

When branches grow directly over or onto the roof, they drop leaves, seeds, and wet debris that sits on the shingles and rots them. On the north side of houses in Livonia, where sunlight is limited from October through March, that moisture never fully dries out.

The Fix

Crown Reduction or Removal

Crown reduction trims the canopy back away from the roofline by 8 to 10 feet. If the tree is too large to trim safely without gutting it, full removal is the cleaner answer.

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 Fast-Growing Species on Small Lots Branches Grown Over the Roofline
Gutters full of helicopter seeds or leaf debris every few months
Branches physically touching or scraping the roof surface
Moss growing on roof shingles on the north side
Tree seedlings sprouting inside the gutters
Dead grass in a large circle under the full canopy spread