One contractor. Scheduled maintenance. Documented risk assessments. Professional cleanup. Trees that stop generating emergencies.
Tired of chasing three different tree crews to handle one property? Done explaining the same liability concern to a contractor who won't put anything in writing? You're the person this page is for.
Property managers and HOA boards in Fayetteville don't need a tree enthusiast. They need a contractor who shows up on schedule, documents the risk, handles the cleanup, and doesn't create a second job out of the first one. The Woodsman Tree Service runs property accounts as accounts — not as a string of one-off calls. One contact. One standard. One contractor who already knows your site. Here's what that looks like.
Every service below is built around the same outcome: your trees stop being a thing you have to think about.
Scheduled, predictable, documented. We build a maintenance rotation around your community's tree inventory — common areas, entrances, walkways, parking — so trees get attention before they become complaints or claims. Boards in Fayetteville get a plan they can budget against, not a surprise invoice after something falls.
Multi-unit properties have foot traffic everywhere. Branches over walkways, limbs near units, sightline issues at entries — all of it on a recurring schedule so it never piles up. We work around residents, not through them. Quiet, contained, off your plate.
This is the service that protects you, not just the trees. A documented risk assessment identifies hazardous trees, structural defects, and failure risks across the property — in writing. When a board or owner in Fayetteville, NY asks "did we know about that tree," the answer is a dated report, not a shrug.
Storms drop limbs. Seasons drop everything else. We handle the cleanup — fallen limbs, brush, debris — fast, so the property looks managed and the walkways stay clear. One call, handled, no coordinating a separate hauler.
Between scheduled visits, things change. A leaning trunk, a cracked limb, a tree that "looks off" after a storm. We inspect on request, evaluate the actual risk, and tell you straight whether it's urgent, watchable, or fine. No alarmism to sell removals, no downplaying to skip work.
Quotes per visit — fresh negotiation every time
The usual company
Different crew every visit
The usual company
Cut and leave the mess
The usual company
Avoids putting risk in writing
The usual company
Predictable contract pricing
The Woodsman
Consistent crews who know your site
The Woodsman
Full cleanup included
The Woodsman
Documented risk assessments
The Woodsman
You're not buying tree work. You're buying not having to manage tree work.
We start with a walk of the property and build a tree inventory and a maintenance calendar around it.
Routine work happens on that schedule without you initiating it — you get notified, not tasked.
Between scheduled visits, you have a direct line for inspections and storm response.
We'll happily handle single trees as residential calls without a contract.
Every property account gets the same commitments: documented work, so there's always a record; defined response times for inspections and storm calls, so "urgent" means something; full cleanup as standard, not as an upsell; and consistent crews, so institutional knowledge of your site doesn't reset every visit. If we assess a tree as hazardous, you get it in writing with the reasoning. If we say something can wait, that's documented too. A property manager in Fayetteville should never have to wonder what was done or why.
If you manage a property, you've probably been pitched a tree maintenance contract — or you're about to be. Most of them are fine. Some of them are designed to look comprehensive while quietly leaving you exposed. Here's how to tell the difference before you sign.
First, check whether risk documentation is actually included or just implied. A real property contract produces dated, written assessments of hazardous trees. If the agreement only promises "trimming" and "maintenance" with no documentation deliverable, you've bought landscaping, not liability protection — and for a board, the paper trail is the entire point.
Second, look at how cleanup is handled. A surprising number of contracts cover the cutting and treat debris removal as a separate, billable line. For a property manager, that's two coordination problems where there should be one. The contract should state plainly that cleanup is included.
Third, ask who actually shows up. A contract is only as good as the crew behind it. If the company can't commit to consistent crews for your property, you'll be re-explaining your site's access and problem trees every single visit, and nothing institutional ever gets remembered.
Fourth, find the response-time language. "We'll get to it" is not a term. Between scheduled visits, storms happen and trees change — your contract should define how fast inspections and emergency calls get answered, and account properties should come ahead of one-off residential work.
Finally, make sure the scope is built from an actual inventory of your property's trees, not a generic template. A contractor who's walked your site in Fayetteville, NY and built the plan around what's really there is offering something different from one selling the same paragraph to every property. The contract should read like it was written for your property — because the work will go the way the contract reads.
Stop running tree work as a series of emergencies. Book a property walk with The Woodsman Tree Service, get a tree inventory and a maintenance calendar built for your site, and move tree care off your task list for good.
Click Here to Call (833) 435-4424Property managers and HOA boards across Fayetteville run on this model because it works. Call The Woodsman and let's set up your account.