Old oaks and sugar maples in the Farmington Historic District. Storm damaged hardwoods along the Farmington River floodplain. Estates in Devonwood with mature canopies that have not been touched in years. We respect the historic district review process.
Tree removal is the most requested job we do. Dead trees, storm damaged trees, trees too close to the house, and trees that just need to come down. We cut them down in sections, haul the wood, chip the brush, and leave the property clean.


Dead trees, hazard trees, trees near structures, storm damage, and routine removal. Residential and commercial. We match the method to the property and the access.

Tree on the house, limb on the car, blocked driveway after a storm. We answer the phone day or night. Emergency calls get priority scheduling across Connecticut.
Wood hauled or stacked. Brush chipped. Area blown clear. Property walkthrough before we leave. The job is not done until the property looks right.
Local expertise built over 25 years working in FARMINGTON, CT.
Same day response. We respond in 2 hours.






Local questions with local answers. Call us if yours is not here.
Contact UsFarmington Tree Warden handles street side. Inland Wetlands for river adjacent work. Historic District Commission reviews tree work in the colonial Main Street area. Devonwood and Unionville have different review processes. We check before every job.
Yes. The Main Street historic district has additional review for tree work because the 200 year old sugar maples and oaks are part of the historic landscape. We work with the Historic District Commission, document the tree condition, and follow approval requirements.
Yes. River adjacent properties have Inland Wetlands rules for the buffer zone. Sycamores along the river often need work after spring flooding events damages root systems. We follow setbacks and stage debris away from the floodplain on every river job.
Yes. Both neighborhoods are part of our regular Farmington service area. Devonwood estates have mature canopies untouched for years and need careful work. Unionville lots are smaller and tighter, with different access challenges than the Devonwood estates have.
Yes. Farmington River floodplain properties have additional rules about equipment access and debris staging. We follow the local restrictions, work outside the regulated buffer when possible, and document compliance for the town inspector when required.
Ready to start your project in FARMINGTON, CT? Free site visit and written scope first.
Shape trees, remove limbs near structures.
Stumps ground below ground after removal.
When a tree is too big for standard removal.
Aerial lift for high pruning and tight spots.
Multiple trees, full lot clearing.
New plantings after trees come down.
We bring the crew to all of Fairfield County and beyond.