This one was a 77 (maybe sold as a 78). Unless it was modified, it had gear doors. Normal procedure with almost all 210s when departing a short strip is to leave the gear down until well into the air, as the cycling gear (and gear doors if so equipped) adds substantial drag until the gear is in the wells. Since one of the main gear appears to have been ripped off and hit the horizontal stabilizer, it was likely down at the moment of collision with the trees.
It's been a long time ago, but one of the things I remember about both the 73 T210 I first flew and the newer 1986 versiion my pard and I owned until I bailed from the partnership, is the dramatic difference in the way that they flew lightly loaded vs. heavily loaded. While that's true of any airplane with a significant W&B envelope, I recall that it was more dramatic than, for instance, a 205 or 206, or for that matter a 182. I don't have a lot of time in any of the 200 series Cessnas, so my memory may be a bit off. But my recollection is that although it was really nose heavy when lightly loaded, it leaped off the runway very quickly, using not a lot of runway. But load it down, and it rolled a long, long way. I think due largely to its more laminar flow wing compared to the others' high lift wings, it just doesn't develop a lot of lift until it's motating pretty quick, well above its lift off speed. It's a great high speed cruiser, but it wouldn't be my choice for a back country airplane, at all.
Cary