The arborist came and said the tree's okay to carry on...the limbs were very big and a huge couple extend over the house. It's 4 feet from the back of the house. It took out part of the patio fence and also damaged the roof, but not too badly I believe. When that day comes they will have to use a crane to take it down. It's the tallest tree on the block.
I'm on hold with the insurer, dreading the process. But the arborist also took pix for me. The insurer was kind enough to mention that they wouldn't expect me to climb on the roof to cover it with a tarp.
Good luck with the oak! I didn't know you could require neighbors to agree to cover limb fall. One of my downers is over the big fence I jsut had rebuilt and sticking into their yard. I don't know if they'll cut it up or expect my insurer to cover it...but I recall (vaguely) something about if a neighbor's tree falls into your yard, tough. Ack.
Glad you got the dangerous ones removed, Amber! The idea of something falling on that barn is not nice. Hope it goes well and safely.
I don't know Dr. Ross' work, Lighter...but it might not surprise you that I don't favor alternative cancer treatments pulling patients away from proven (even though sometimes grueling) ones. A friend who was extremely anti-conventional medicine died a ghastly death from a breast tumor...and anyway, I believe in allopathy. Being a DES daughter illuminated a lot of it for me in the 1960s. It's a drug that was prescribed to many women in the 50s and 60s before they knew it could cause a rare cancer in the babies. I was monitored for cancer for two decades before my precondition resolved. Had a surgical procedure too. The irony is that although it was generally an ineffective anti-miscarriage agent, in my case it was clear I wouldn't have been born without it (my mother went off it a month before I was due and I was born in 24 hours). So, weirdly, this nasty drug saved my life.
hugs
Hops