Covering 16 Missouri cities and towns with free referrals to independent licensed tree pros — removal, trimming, stumps, and 24/7 storm response.
Tell us your ZIP and the situation — we match you with an independent pro who covers it. Free referral, free estimate, no obligation.
(866) 313-3285
Franklin County rides the Ozark border where Missouri's severe-weather seasons overlap: spring supercells and tornadoes, summer heat that bakes shallow-soiled ridgetop oaks, and just enough ice in winter to prune every weak fork in the county. The native oak-hickory forest is gorgeous and heavy — white and red oaks over rocky soil that limits root depth, shortleaf pines on the glades, and fast-growing silver maples and Bradford pears in every subdivision built since the 80s. Oak decline (a slow-motion complex of age, drought, and root fungus) is quietly thinning ridge oaks across the county, turning them brittle years before they look dead from the driveway.
Supercells and tornadoes march–june; damaging summer heat/drought cycles; ice storms december–february. Hardiness zones 6a–7a set the growing season; the storm calendar sets the emergency season. After a major event, local crews triage — trees on occupied homes first, blocked access second. The earlier you call (866) 313-3285, the earlier you're in the queue.
Each linked city page carries its own local data — Census housing profile, storm history, and the tree species that dominate that community:
Call (866) 313-3285 with your ZIP code — TreeCrewFinder covers 16 ZIPs across 16 Missouri communities, and we connect you free with an independent licensed tree pro who actually works your area. No directory roulette; one call, one match, free estimate from the pro.
Around the clock. Missouri's storm profile — supercells and tornadoes March–June; damaging summer heat/drought cycles; ice storms December–February — means emergencies cluster, and local crews triage: trees on homes first. Calling early gets you into the queue sooner, any hour: (866) 313-3285.
Unincorporated Franklin County has no private tree removal permitting; small municipalities regulate street trees only. Rural norms apply — the constraint is utility lines and neighbor boundaries, not paperwork.
The usual suspects here: white oak, red/black oak (decline-prone on ridges), shagbark hickory, silver maple, Bradford pear, eastern red cedar. Our city pages cover what that means street by street — and the referred local pro will know your neighborhood's specific troublemakers on sight.
The independent licensed pro sets the price after seeing the job — size, condition, access, and what's under the tree drive every quote. Our referral is free, the pro's estimate is free, and you're never obligated.
Free referral to an independent licensed local pro. Free estimate. No obligation.
Call (866) 313-3285 — Free Referral