Tree Pruning
No single operation is usually sufficient to maintain a tree; it is a combination of techniques that are chosen for the individual trees requirements. This may for example, consist of a Crown Thin, Removal of deadwood and a Crown Lift. We always comply with industry best practice and current arboriculture principles.
Fruit Tree Pruning
Pruning fruit trees is a technique that is employed to control growth, remove dead or diseased wood or stimulate the formation of flowers and fruit buds. Pruning often means cutting branches shorter or off altogether, but may also mean the removal of shoots (including stems), buds, leaves, etc.
Formative Pruning
We use this method in the early years of a tree’s growth, to create a good branch structure and desirable form, or to correct defects or weaknesses.
• Aythorope Roding • Barnston • Basildon • Black Notley • Bishops Stortford • Brentwood • Braintree • Broomfield • Broomfield • Buntingford • Castle Hedingham • Chelmsford • Clavering • Colchester • Cressing • Danbury • Debden • Duton Hill • Earles Colne • Elsenham • Epping • Felsted • Finchingfield • Ford End • Fyfield • Great Chesterford • Great Baddow • Great Bardfield • Great Dunmow • Great Hallinbury • Great Leighs • Great Notley • Great Easton •
Gosfield • Good Easter • Halstead • Haverhill • Hanningfield • Harlow • Hatfield Broadoak • Hatfield heath • Henham • High Easter • High Roding • Ingatestone • Latchingdon • Lindsell • Linton • Littlebury • Little Chesterford • Little Easton • Little Hadham • Little Hallingbury • Little Waltham • Loughton • Margaretting • Maldon • Matching Green • Much Hadham • Newport • Ongar • Perry Green • Sheering
•Stansted • Roxwell • Rayne • Radwinter • Romford • Saffron Walden • Sampford • Sawston • Sawbridgeworth • Sible Hedingham • Stebbing • Steeple Bumpsted • Takeley • Thaxted • The Pelhams • Tilty • Ware • Wethersfield • Witham • White Roding • Wimbish • Willinggale