Tree Pruning in Worsley
Tree surgeon work for gardens: careful pruning and tree trimming that keeps your trees healthy, tidy and the right size, with council checks handled before a single cut. Around eight miles from our Leigh base.
Tree Pruning for Worsley Gardens
Mature trees are part of what makes Worsley feel like Worsley, and part of what we’re most careful with. We prune, reduce, thin and shape garden trees so they keep their character while letting light back into the garden and staying clear of roofs, wires and boundaries.
We cover Worsley and the surrounding area: Worsley Village, Roe Green, Broadoak Park, Hazelhurst, Alder Forest and beyond (M28).
Get a Free Worsley Quote
What’s Included
Worsley Village is a conservation area and plenty of local trees carry protection, so paperwork matters here: works to protected trees need Salford City Council’s consent first. We check before we quote and handle the notification where it’s needed.
- Crown reduction, thinning, lifting and deadwooding
- Tree trimming, reshaping and pollarding for overgrown or lopsided trees
- Fruit tree pruning for health and cropping
- Small tree felling, removal and taking the stump out
- TPO and conservation area checks with the council
- All branches and green waste taken away
How It Works
Tree Pruning in Worsley, FAQs
If the tree has a Tree Preservation Order or sits in the Worsley Village conservation area, yes: Salford City Council must approve or be notified first. We check the register for you before any work is priced.
Yes, a proper crown reduction cuts back to growth points so the tree keeps a natural outline and regrows evenly. What we don’t do is “topping”, which ruins the shape and the tree’s health.
Crown reduction makes the whole tree smaller by cutting back to lower growth points, keeping a natural shape. Crown thinning keeps the tree the same size but removes selected branches so more light and wind pass through. Thinning is often the answer when the real problem is shade, not size.
Your local council keeps a register of TPOs, and trees in conservation areas have similar protection. You usually need to give the council six weeks’ notice before working on them. We check this for you before quoting, because unauthorised work on a protected tree can mean a hefty fine.
As a rule of thumb, no more than about a third of the live crown in a single season. Cutting harder than that stresses the tree and triggers a mess of weak, fast regrowth. If a tree needs a big reduction, it’s often better done in stages a year or two apart. We’ll advise on what the tree can take.