Trimming in Coral Gables is its own discipline. The trees are old (most live oaks on the major boulevards are 50+ years), the ordinance is strict (Chapter 34 limits what counts as routine pruning vs. permit-requiring work), and the wrong cut can permanently damage a canopy that took half a century to grow. Lion-tailing a live oak — stripping the lower laterals so only a tuft remains at the top — is what unscrupulous operators do because it's fast and visible. It's also catastrophic for the tree's structural strength under wind load. We don't do it.
The Coral Gables tree code treats canopy reduction over 25% as removal-equivalent, meaning it triggers the same permit process as taking the tree down. That sounds restrictive, but it actually protects you — proper structural pruning rarely needs more than 10–15% canopy work in a given season. We tell you exactly how much we're removing before we start, and we work to the city standard so you don't get a code violation.
Licensed, insured, bilingual, family-run. The crew is trained on ANSI A300 pruning standards (the ISA reference), uses the 75-ft bucket where access permits, climbs where it doesn't, and protects every brick paver, fountain, and sculpture under the canopy before the first cut. Quote written on-site after walking each tree.
Four canopy issues we work on almost every Coral Gables trimming job.
The Gables canopy. Live oaks need selective deadwood removal, lateral balancing, and clearance pruning over driveways and roofs — never lion-tailing, never canopy thinning beyond 15% in a season. Done right, a mature live oak holds for hurricanes through 100+ mph wind. Done wrong, the tree splits or topples. We work to ANSI A300 specs, document the percentage removed, stay under city thresholds.
The most beautiful and most structurally fragile tree on the boulevards. The classic V-crotch on a poinciana fails under wind load — every named storm we lose a few in the Gables. Strategic crown reduction and balancing pruning before the V loads up with weight is the call. We trim them in late winter / early spring, before the May bloom adds canopy weight.
Jacarandas drop a lot of debris (purple flower carpet looks pretty until you have to clean the pool weekly). Mahoganies drop pods and leaves. Both benefit from selective canopy thinning to reduce debris load — but mahoganies are specimen-protected, so the trim has to stay under the city's reduction threshold.
April through early June is the window for hurricane-prep trimming. Earlier and the canopy regrows before storm season; later and the tree is heat-stressed. The Gables canopy is dense and the trim work fills our calendar fast — the smart call is booking March for an April trim window.
The questions Gables homeowners ask before they book canopy work.
We'll walk every tree with you, mark exactly which limbs are coming off, document the canopy percentage we'll remove, and stay inside the Gables ordinance. The quote is written on-site after that walk.