Some of what we know about trees didn't come from a textbook. It came from climbing alongside family who'd already spent decades doing this work, learning to read a tree's structure and history the way you'd learn a language spoken at home.
That kind of hands-on training shapes how the whole crew approaches a job today, slowing down to actually look at a tree before making a cut, rather than working from a generic checklist.
It's part of why the company has stayed rooted in the same communities across Baltimore County and York County for as long as it has. The work gets passed down, and so does the standard for doing it right.
Did anyone in your family teach you a skill you still use today?
#FamilyOwned
Photo of the crew working together on a job site, or equipment and tools that reflect the company's hands-on roots. Authentic job photos preferred over stock imagery; do not name individuals in the graphic text.
Canva text suggestion: "Three Generations, One Standard" or "A Trade Passed Down, Not Just Taught"