Gomez Tree and Landscape

Google Business Profile | Tuesday, July 28, 2026

Houston's Peak Hurricane Season: Pre-Storm Tree Risk Assessment Before the Next System Forms

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Late summer is the most active stretch of hurricane season for the Gulf Coast, and the trees already showing weakness on a property are the ones most likely to cause damage when the next system moves through Houston.

A pre-storm risk assessment looks for the specific things that turn a routine tree into a threat: leaning trunks, large dead limbs, shallow or exposed root systems, and canopy that's grown too heavy for the tree's structure to support in high wind. Catching these issues now, while the weather is calm, is far easier than dealing with them mid-storm.

This kind of assessment matters most for properties in Cypress, Spring, Sugar Land, and West University, where mature canopy sits close to homes, driveways, and power lines.

Getting ahead of storm season with a property walkthrough now can prevent an emergency call later.

#HurricaneSeason #HoustonTreeService #StormPrep #CypressTexas #TreeRiskAssessment


Image / Media Suggestion

Authentic job photo preferred: a crew member assessing a tree for lean, dead limbs, or root exposure on a Houston-area property. A photo showing mature canopy close to a home's roofline underscores the urgency of this seasonal message.

Google Drive image folder.

Canva text suggestion: "Is Your Property Ready for Hurricane Season?" or "Assess the Risk Before the Storm Arrives"


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