
Home turf. Fastest response in the book.
Get a Whitestown Estimate Call (317) 406-4920Whitestown is where our trucks sleep, which makes it the fastest estimate and the fastest storm response on our whole map. It's also a town of two tree populations living side by side: the young street trees of Anson, Walker Farms and Harvest Park — planted with the subdivisions, now hitting the age where structural pruning decides their next forty years — and the old farmstead giants along the rural roads west of I-65, the oaks and ashes that predate every rooftop around them.
The young-neighborhood work is mostly preventive and cheap: clearance pruning as canopies reach rooflines, structural corrections on fast-growing maples and pears (the builder-favorite Bradford pears are reaching their infamous self-destruction years — if yours hasn't split yet, it's volunteering), and the occasional removal where a builder planted a forest tree in a fifteen-foot side yard. The farmstead work is the opposite: big dead ash standing guard over barns and lane entrances, storm-damaged giants that need real rigging, fencerows grown into wire.
Storm season treats Whitestown's open western edge hard — the wind gets a running start over the fields. Leaners and hangers here jump our line, usually same-day. And because we're local, the follow-through is local too: the same crew that dropped the tree waves at you in the Kroger lot. That accountability is the product.
Same numbers as everywhere we climb: removals mostly $400–$1,500 (large or craned work above that), single-tree prunings $200–$700, stumps from $100–$250 with batch pricing, storm hazards prioritized and documented. The cost guide breaks all of it down, and the written estimate is free and holds its number.