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Tree service in Crowley, TX by Sion Tree Service
Tarrant County · Texas

Tree Service in Crowley, TX

When you need a dependable tree service in Crowley, TX, Sion Tree Service shows up on time and treats your property like it's our own. From the older shaded lots north of Main Street to the newer builds filling in along FM 1187 toward the Chisholm Trail Parkway, we work on Crowley trees every week and know how this stretch of south Tarrant County behaves.

4.9 · 146 reviews Open Daily 6 AM–7 PM

Crowley sits right where the Fort Worth suburbs meet open North Texas prairie, so yards here run from big established post oaks and pecans to fresh landscape plantings around the master-planned sections. We handle the full range: precision trimming, safe removals, stump grinding, and storm cleanup. Edgar and our crew are local, licensed, and insured, and every visit ends with a complete haul-away so it looks like we were never there.

Crowley homeowners choose Sion because we're a local owner-operated crew, not a national chain passing through. We respond fast, often same-day or next-day, with trained climbers and well-maintained equipment, and the price we quote is the price you pay. After every job we rake, blow, and haul everything off so your yard is spotless, and that immaculate cleanup is the biggest reason neighbors keep referring us across 76036.

Neighborhoods & Areas We Serve in Crowley

We work throughout Crowley, including Karis, Deer Creek Estates, Parks of Deer Creek, Rosemary Ridge, the Eagle Drive area, older neighborhoods north of Main Street, and nearby ZIP codes 76036, 76028. You'll often find our crews near Bicentennial Park, Crouch Event Center, Chisholm Trail Parkway.

Common Tree Problems in Crowley

  • Oak wilt risk, which is why we avoid pruning oaks February through June when the disease spreads most easily
  • Expansive clay soil along the Sycamore Creek drainages that shifts and stresses shallow roots
  • Drought stress and lingering decline from the 2021 freeze on older live oaks and crepe myrtles
  • Spring storm, hail, and straight-line wind damage that splits limbs and uproots weakened trees

Crowley Tree Permits & Ordinances

The City of Crowley maintains tree-preservation and landscaping rules, and protected or heritage trees on certain properties can require review before removal. Permit and ordinance details vary by lot and project, so we help homeowners confirm what's needed before any work begins.

Not sure if your tree needs a permit? We'll help you figure it out during your free estimate.

Crowley Tree Care, Up Close

The local conditions, rules, and tree stock that shape tree work in Crowley — and what they mean for your property.

Tree Care for Crowley's Established Lots and New Master-Planned Subdivisions

Crowley's housing splits cleanly into two worlds, and the right tree work is different for each. The ranch-style homes built roughly between 1950 and 1980 north of Main Street and out toward Deer Creek came with decades to grow big post oaks, live oaks, and pecans, while the master-planned communities filling in along FM 1187 and the Chisholm Trail Parkway carry young builder-planted trees that are still finding their footing in heavy Crowley clay.

Mature canopy on established Crowley lots

On the older, shaded lots the priority is keeping large, decades-old trees safe and sound over the house. We do crown cleaning to pull deadwood, weight-reduction cuts on long limbs that overhang rooflines and Oncor service drops, and careful takedowns when drought stress or lingering 2021-freeze decline has hollowed a live oak or crepe myrtle past saving. Because so many of these are oaks, we keep pruning to the dormant months and steer clear of February through June, when oak wilt moves most easily across North Texas.

Young trees in Karis, Miraverde and Lasater Ranch

In the newer Crowley subdivisions the trees are small, the soil was recently disturbed, and a few good cuts early on pay off for decades. The 565-acre Karis community alone is platted for more than two thousand homesites, and we see a lot of the same fixable problems across these builder lots.

  • Structural and formative pruning so a single dominant leader develops instead of weak, codominant stems
  • Removing or loosening nursery stakes and ties that were left on too long and are girdling young trunks
  • Correcting trees set too deep in the planting hole, a common cause of decline in Crowley's slow-draining clay
  • Choosing and placing tough native replacements like cedar elm, bur oak, and Mexican white oak that hold up to drought and heavy soil

Deer Creek, Trinity Floodplain Clay, and Crowley Storm Exposure

Much of what makes Crowley trees behave the way they do comes down to water and wind. Deer Creek runs about 6,000 feet through Bicentennial Park at 900 E. Glendale and drains on toward the West Fork of the Trinity River, and the lots that back up to those creek corridors and floodplain pockets sit on some of the most expansive, slow-draining soil in town.

How creek-bottom clay stresses Crowley trees

Bicentennial Park is a living example of the local ground: it carries Grand Prairie tallgrass, Edwards Plateau savanna, and Central Texas floodplain hardwood forest, and the city has had to address how runoff and flooding degrade that bottomland. The same expansive Blackland-style clay along the Deer Creek and Sycamore Creek drainages swells when it's wet and cracks hard in summer, which heaves shallow roots, tilts trunks, and leaves trees more likely to lean or fail. We read those warning signs and recommend root-zone-friendly fixes rather than guessing.

Spring storms and what we clear in 76036

South Tarrant County takes a beating during spring hail and derecho season. Crowley has seen straight-line winds in the 70-to-80 mph range drop trees, snap limbs, and knock out power to thousands of homes across the county in a single storm. After events like that we move fast on the highest-risk work first.

  • Trees and large limbs resting on roofs, fences, or vehicles
  • Branches tangled in or threatening Oncor power lines, coordinated safely with the utility
  • Split, cracked, or hanging limbs left dangling over driveways and play areas
  • Uprooted or leaning trees in saturated creek-side soil that could come down next
  • Complete haul-away and cleanup so your Crowley yard looks like the storm never hit
Serving the Area

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Reviews

What Crowley-Area Homeowners Say

4.9from 146 Google reviews
Sion Tree Service did an outstanding job trimming the trees at my home. The crew of 6 came in and quickly removed all the dead limbs and trees that needed to come out. Their cleanup was amazing! Highly recommend them!
LLawonna DawsonTree Trimming · Google Review
Very fast work, arrived right on time, workers very professional and cleaned up before leaving. The price was what was quoted. I'd recommend them to anyone needing tree trimming. I'll be using them again!
DDan HinkleTree Trimming · Google Review
Great communication and super responsive. Squeezed me in the next day and did an awesome job removing and grinding a large tree that had fallen in a storm. Have used them twice with great service both times.
AAustin SmithStump Grinding · Google Review
Questions

Crowley Tree Service FAQs

Yes. We cover the entire Crowley footprint, from Karis and Deer Creek Estates to the older neighborhoods north of Main Street and the newer subdivisions along FM 1187. Both the 76036 and 76028 sides of town are part of our regular service area.

Absolutely. Crowley has a lot of mature post oaks, live oaks, and pecans, and our trained climbers handle tight backyard removals near fences, pools, and homes. We rig limbs down safely, grind the stump on request, and haul everything away so you'd never know we were there.

For oaks, we recommend trimming in the dormant winter months and avoiding February through June, when oak wilt spreads most easily across North Texas. Most other Crowley species can be pruned year-round, and we'll always advise the safest timing for your specific trees during a free estimate.

Crowley's zoning code (Article 8, Landscaping and Screening) requires that pervious areas of a lot stay covered with live landscaping such as sod, shrubs, grasses, or trees, and it specifically allows xeriscaping in those areas for water conservation, which suits our hot, clay-heavy yards. For a routine homeowner removal that isn't a new build or commercial site, you usually won't trigger a formal landscape review, but it's smart to confirm with City Hall before you clear a large tree near a required buffer or screening strip. During your free estimate we'll point you to the right department and suggest drought-tough replacements like cedar elm or bur oak that satisfy the live-landscaping rule.

Crowley sits a short hop off I-35W and the Chisholm Trail Parkway, so our crew typically reaches 76036 the same day or next morning after the spring storms that roll through south Tarrant County. We've cleared the 70-to-80 mph straight-line winds and hail that knocked out power and dropped limbs from Joshua up through Crowley, and we prioritize trees on houses, fences, and Oncor service lines first. Call early and we'll get a trained climber and our track loader headed your way.

In the 1950s-to-1980s ranch homes north of Main Street and around Deer Creek, the work is usually mature post oak, live oak, and pecan care: deadwood removal, weight reduction over rooflines, and full takedowns of trees declining from drought and the 2021 freeze. In newer master-planned sections like Karis, Miraverde, and Lasater Ranch, it's young builder-planted trees that need structural pruning, staking corrections, and shaping so they grow strong in Crowley's expansive clay. We handle both ends of that range every week.

Need a Tree Service in Crowley, TX?

Call Sion Tree Service for tree removal, trimming, stump grinding, and cleanup in Crowley — open daily with free estimates.

Open daily 6 AM–7 PM · Serving Fort Worth & the DFW metroplex

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