We get called after the fact more often than we'd like. A tree that showed warning signs last year finally fails after a storm, and suddenly a homeowner is dealing with roof damage, a felled fence, and an emergency removal that costs way more than proactive maintenance would have.
Hazard trees are predictable. A tree with a significant lean, dead branches throughout the canopy, or fungal growth on the trunk isn't likely to get healthier on its own. The longer you wait, the higher the risk and the higher the eventual cost.
A free assessment now, done safely in clear weather, gives you time to make a plan and get it scheduled at a fair price. Emergency removals cost significantly more. Prevention is always smarter than damage control.
Do you have any trees on your property that you keep meaning to deal with, or that have been concerning you?
Before/after of a hazard tree removal, showing the danger visible in the "before" (lean, dead wood, obvious defect) and the restored property in the "after." Educational clarity preferred. Google Drive: Google Drive image folder
Canva text suggestion: "Deal With It Now, Save Money Later" or "Prevention Beats Emergency"