Queen Anne, Seattle — Tree Removal & Emergency Dispatch
Local tree removal dispatch for Queen Anne, near Kerry Park. Queen Anne lots typically feature wind-exposed hilltops and steep west-facing slopes above Elliott Bay, which is exactly the profile of trees that fail in Puget Sound windstorms. One call routes you to a local crew.
Emergency scenarios in Queen Anne
Tap the situation that matches what happened.
A tree just came through your roof, wall, or into a room. This is the sequence for the first hour.
A tree came down in your yard without hitting the house. Removal is still time-sensitive — pressure-loaded limbs and unstable root balls are the main hazards.
A tree is blocking the roadway or lying across the street in front of your property. Right-of-way and utilities affect who does what.
A tree came down on a vehicle in your driveway or on the street.
A tree is resting on your roof and putting active load on the structure. The longer it sits, the more damage it does.
A tree came down across a fence — often the shared line with a neighbor. Removal and repair questions get tangled with who owned the tree.
A tree is blocking your driveway or came down across it — cars trapped, access cut off, or both.
A tree came down on a detached or attached garage — often with vehicles, tools, or utilities inside.
A tree or large limb came down on a deck, patio cover, or pergola.
A tree is leaning against your house, partially uprooted, or clearly moved since the last storm. It hasn't fully fallen — yet.
The root ball has lifted out of the ground. The tree may be down, hung up in another tree, or partially standing.
A major limb came down — on the house, yard, car, or hanging up in the tree above. The rest of the tree may still be a hazard.
A broken limb is caught up in the canopy and hasn't come down yet. In the trade this is called a widowmaker — it's the classic post-storm injury.
The trunk has cracked, split at a co-dominant fork, or shows a fresh vertical fissure after a storm. Structural failure is in progress.
A windstorm or snow event left multiple trees, limbs, and debris across the property. You need one crew to work through it.