Hanging Limb Or Widowmaker In A Tree in Georgetown? We dispatch a local crew fast.
If a hanging limb in tree in Georgetown, one call gets a local South Seattle tree crew on the way. Georgetown sits near the Georgetown Steam Plant, and its lots typically feature large cottonwoods along the Duwamish and mature street trees on older blocks — the kind of context our dispatched crews already know.
First steps — hanging limb incident
Rope off the drop zone and keep people out. Do not try to knock it down with a rake, ladder, or extension pole — hung limbs drop in unpredictable directions.
What Georgetown calls typically look like
Georgetown sits in South Seattle and is characterized by large cottonwoods along the Duwamish and mature street trees on older blocks. During Puget Sound windstorms — especially November through February — saturated soils and hard south winds combine to bring down big trees. Calls like “hanging limb in tree” spike in these windows.
Insurance angle
Removing a hanging limb before it falls is typically not covered — it's preventive. Waiting for it to fall usually costs more, and can cost a claim.
Ask any contractor for proof of current license and general liability insurance before work begins on your Georgetown property, and confirm coverage details with your homeowners insurance carrier. This is standard consumer guidance for any tree job.
FAQ
- How urgent is it?
- Urgent enough that arborists have a dedicated word for it. Wind, temperature swings, or a squirrel can bring it down.
- Can you get it down without climbing?
- Sometimes with a bucket truck or throw line, depending on height and access.