Tree Pruning Wantagh

Local Tree Pruning Experts

Enhance your landscape with Green Light Tree Services’s expert tree pruning in Wantagh. Boost tree health and curb appeal effortlessly.

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100% Customer Satisfaction

Benefits of Tree Pruning

Why Choose Professional Pruning?

  • Promotes tree health by removing dead or diseased branches.
  • Improves safety by reducing the risk of falling limbs.
  • Enhances aesthetic appeal, adding value to your property.
  • Encourages healthy growth patterns and robust trees.
  • About Green Light Tree Services

    Your Local Tree Care Experts

    At Green Light Tree Services, based in Wantagh, NY, we pride ourselves on offering top-notch tree services. Our certified arborists bring expertise and passion to every project, ensuring your trees thrive. We serve the entire Nassau County, delivering reliable and professional tree care. Trust us for all your residential and commercial tree services needs.

    Our Pruning Process

    Simple Steps to Healthier Trees

  • Assessment: Evaluate tree health and determine pruning needs.
  • Pruning: Carefully remove unwanted branches using professional techniques.
  • Clean-Up: Ensure your property is left neat and tidy after service.
  • Comprehensive Tree Care

    Importance of Regular Maintenance

    Tree pruning is crucial for maintaining the health and safety of your trees. At Green Light Tree Services, we offer a comprehensive range of services, including tree trimming, shrub trimming, and stump grinding. Our team in Wantagh, NY, ensures your trees are healthy and your landscape looks its best. Contact us today at 631-923-3033 to schedule your service and experience the difference professional care makes.

    View Our Tree Removal Services

    About Green Light Tree Services

    Contact us

    The Wantagh area was inhabited by the Merokee (or Merikoke) tribe of the Metoac Indians prior to the first wave of European settlement in the mid-17th century. The Merokee were part of the greater Montauk tribe that loosely ruled Long Island’s Native Americans. Wantagh was the sachem (chief) of the Merokee tribe in 1647, and was later the grand sachem of the Montauk tribe from 1651 to 1658. The Dutch settlers came east from their New Amsterdam colony, and English settlers came south from Connecticut and Massachusetts settlements. When the English and Dutch settled their competing claims to Long Island in the 1650 treaty conducted in Hartford, the Dutch partition included all lands west of Oyster Bay and thus the Wantagh area. Long Island then was ceded to the Duke of York in 1663-64, but then fell back into Dutch hands after the Dutch regained New York in 1673. The Treaty of Westminster in 1674 settled the land claims once and for all, incorporating Long Island into the now-British colony of New York.

    Early settler accounts refer to Wantagh as “Jerusalem”. The creek running north-south through Wantagh, and which has been covered up in many places but is still visible between the Wantagh Parkway and the housing developments west of Wantagh Avenue, was originally the Jerusalem River. The original post office was built in 1837, for Jerusalem, but mail service from Brooklyn began around 1780. The town’s first school was established in 1790. At some time around the 1880s, Jerusalem was renamed Ridgewood, and the town’s original LIRR station was named “Ridgewood Station”. Later, Ridgewood was renamed Wantagh to avoid confusion with another town in New York State with the same name.

    George Washington rode through Jerusalem on April 21, 1790, as part of his 5-day tour of Long Island. The Daughters of the American Revolution have placed a plaque on Hempstead Turnpike to commemorate Washington’s travels, which took him from Hempstead on Jerusalem Road (now North Jerusalem Road) to Jerusalem, on to Merrick Road. He then went on to head east, then circle back west on the north shore. During the Revolutionary War, British ships traveled up Jones inlet and came ashore to raid Jerusalem farms.

    Learn more about Wantagh.