How to Prune the Cost of Tree Trimming

Advertising Disclosure: When you buy something by clicking links on our site, we may earn a small commission, but it never affects the products or services we recommend.

Image Not Available

The following post comes from Debra L. Karplus at partner site The Dollar Stretcher.

If you live in a home with trees on your property, consider yourself lucky. They’re not only beautiful – fruit trees, flowering trees, evergreens, and deciduous trees (which shed leaves each autumn) provide shade and help moderate temperatures.

That’s especially helpful in places with harsher winters or locations with extreme heat and intense sunlight. Older homes often have large trees that are sometimes the age of the house itself. If you’re in a newer home, live there long enough and you’ll reap the benefits of your trees as they grow.

Although most of the trees on your property require little care other than removing twigs on the ground each spring before the first mowing – and the fall ritual of raking leaves – inspect each tree annually. Make sure it doesn’t need pruning, trimming, shaping, or possibly removal.

Why trim or remove a tree

Trees look better, maintain their shape, and grow healthier when they’re pruned periodically. Fruit trees will be more fruitful with a yearly trimming. On any tree, dead branches or overgrown limbs need to be cut. If a tree is too close to a roof, it needs to be trimmed. Branches near or touching a roof can cause serious water damage to a roof and other parts of a home.

A dead tree needs to be cut down before it falls down. Better to control when and where it falls than to have a storm knock it into power lines or atop your roof, fence, or car. A diseased tree can be salvaged. Call an arborist, contact your university’s cooperative extension office, or check the Internet for guidelines before you have a tree cut down.

Going out on a limb

Use your best judgment to determine whether tree pruning or removal is something you can do by yourself or with another person’s assistance. Find out the best time of year to do the trimming that you’ll be doing, as this sometimes varies for different types of trees. For relatively small jobs, one person using a pair of loppers can easily remove branches as wide as approximately 1 inch in diameter. Larger branches can be cut with a pole handsaw or electric pole chainsaw.

Check the home improvement center to purchase the most appropriate tool for your job. These tools will pay for themselves in a short amount of time, if you have even a few small trees on your property. For larger jobs, a chainsaw (gas or electric) will do the job.

Gas saws are typically heavier, but give you more mobility around the yard. The chain and bar can be as short as 10 inches or as large as 18 inches or more. Solicit advice on which size saw will suit your needs.

For the larger jobs, you’ll need sturdy rope to guide a fallen large branch or tree to the specific spot where you want it to land – you’ll need at least one helper for this. Trim away smaller branches first, and then plan ahead where the tree should fall. Whatever size job, always wear work gloves and hard closed-toe shoes with good soles.

Leave the job to a certified arborist

If you feel the job is bigger than you can do safely, hire someone. But be cautious. The handyman who fixed your toilet, for example, may lack the skill required to correctly and safely trim trees. Certified arborists are schooled in tree care and are licensed, bonded, and insured. Hire an arborist recommended by a friend or neighbor, if possible.

Don’t be shocked when you’re quoted several hundred dollars or more for even routine pruning. Arborists are trained and have special equipment. They often use a bucket truck, lift, and tall extension ladders.

There are some ways to lower the costs of professional tree trimming. Get your quote first, and then ask if it will be cheaper if they leave the uncut wood behind. Someone you know can certainly use the firewood for their campfire, bonfire, fireplace, or wood stove and can utilize the smaller pieces as kindling to start a fire.

Also inquire if the cost will be lower if they cut off-season, approximately October to April. Not having to dispose of leaves and brush should save the arborists time and expense; hopefully that savings can be passed along to you. When getting a price quote, be sure to check if they’ll do stump grinding also, as it’s often a completely separate process. As with other home improvements, it’s prudent to obtain more than one free estimate.

Stretch your dollars by keeping your trees healthy, well shaped, and off your roof. It’s one way you can maintain the beauty of your trees and property while shading your home. Do it yourself or with a helper, or hire a professional.

Originally in The Dollar Stretcher. Follow TDS on Twitter.

Get smarter with your money!

Want the best money-news and tips to help you make more and spend less? Then sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter to receive daily updates of personal finance news and advice, delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for our free newsletter today.