When your trees are bare and dormant, the absence of leaves and dense canopy layers offers a rare clarity. This is precisely why many arborists recommend assessments during the cold season, so you can see what summer often conceals.
- Unobstructed lines of sight: Branch unions, internal cracks, structural defects, and cavities become easier to spot when there’s no foliage blocking your view.
- Closer inspection of bark and trunk: Without leaves, you can better identify bark splits, frost cracks, cankers, fungal fruiting bodies, or discoloration along the trunk.
- Root flare and ground features: Snow-free ground (or lightly covered) allows you to see soil heaving, exposed roots, root girdling, or erosion that might go unnoticed under mulch or dense summer vegetation.
- Better working conditions: Crews can move more easily and safely in dormant season, and limited foliage reduces risks of damage while climbing or installing supports.
Because of these advantages, a winter structural inspection offers deeper insight into your trees’ health and stability. Understanding these conditions early gives you time to plan tree maintenance ahead of summer—including pruning, cabling, fertilization, or pest prevention—when doing so is safer, more precise, and often more cost efficient.
Plus, conducting a tree health assessment in winter allows you to prioritize and budget for summer tasks with clarity, rather than scrambling once problems become urgent under full leaf.