What we do
What gets done, and how.
Every job — from a six-foot maple going in the ground to a sixty-foot oak coming out of it — is done by an ISA Certified Arborist holding the Wisconsin Arborist Journeyworker credential.
Pruning
Structural pruning, done to standard.
Most "tree trimming" makes a tree look better today and worse next year. Proper structural pruning is a long-horizon discipline: which branches stay, which leave, where the wound heals, how the canopy redistributes load through the next storm.
Done by hand and by saw, from the ground or from rope — sized to the tree, the species, and the season.
Planting
Right tree. Right place. Long life.
What gets planted in May lives or dies on what happens in the first ninety minutes. Species selection for your site (soil, light, water, exposure), correct hole depth and width, root-flare placement, mulching, staking, and the watering schedule that gets a new tree through its first two winters.
Tree replacements after a removal, landscape additions, memorial trees, and full-property plantings.
Removal
Hand-felled, climbed-and-rigged, or crane-assisted.
Small trees come down with a saw and a rope. Larger ones come down piece by piece, climbed and lowered. The biggest, or the ones positioned over structures, come down with the crane — mechanized removal that lifts each section clear of what's below.
Which method is the right one is a planning conversation, not a guess. You'll see the plan before the chainsaws start.
Plant Health Care — PHC
The work that means you don't need a removal.
Trees don't get sick fast. They get sick slow, and you notice when it's too late. PHC is the in-between work: fertilization where the soil's depleted, soil-structure amendment in compacted yards, pest pressure (emerald ash borer, spongy moth, scale insects), disease identification (oak wilt, anthracnose, apple scab), and the seasonal maintenance that keeps the tree you love from becoming the tree you have to remove.
Annual PHC programs available; one-time diagnostics also welcome.
When the wind hits
Storm damage gets prioritized.
A tree on your roof doesn't wait for a quote three weeks out. Storm work jumps ahead of routine scheduling. Describe the situation and Paul will reach you directly to coordinate.
Ready to get it on the schedule?
Tell us about the tree. Paul will get back to you directly.
Request an estimate