Saint Petersburg Emergency Tree Services


Call (727) 897-5289 for a free consultation if you have an Saint Petersburg emergency tree services need. We have over 30 years of experience handling tree emergencies nationwide.

Call AAA Emergency Tree Service in Saint Petersburg if:

  • You have a tree or a branch that's fallen or is just about ready to fall and you need help now.
  • A builder or property owner has tree, limb or stump in the way of construction.
  • A Realtor or property owner needs tree trimming for a closing, open house or insurance- related incident.
  • An out-of-town property owner needs work done while they're in town
  • Today is the day to tackle that tree trimming, tree removal or stump removal project.
  • A cat's in a tree and needs to be rescued.

We offer our clients comprehensive Saint Petersburg emergency tree servicess:

  • Technical competence to handle any Saint Petersburg emergency tree services need.
  • Equipment and skill to handle difficult jobs - day or night.
  • The ability to respond 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, Nationwide.
  • Fair and reasonable charges.
  • An intention to deliver "more than expected" results on every project.

The AAA Saint Petersburg emergency tree services Process

The process starts with your call to us letting us know all the pertinent information about your Saint Petersburg emergency tree services project. After we have this info we will have our local Network Contractor call you as soon as its' possible, usually within 10 to 15 minutes from when you call. At that time they will arrange a time to meet with you, access your tree situation and give you a price and a time line as to when the project can be completed. With your acceptance they will get the project under way. When the project is completed, AAA Saint Petersburg emergency tree services will follow up with you to make sure everything has been done to your complete satisfaction and with this goal being accomplished allows you to move on with your life with peace of mind.

FAQs We Can Answer With Just a Phone Call

  • Why trim trees?
  • What is a complete trim?
  • What is a safety trim?
  • What about hauling and cleanup,is that included?
  • What do you do you do with the trees or branches when you finish?
  • The tree that I have is in the back yard,don't you need a bucket truck to trim my tree?
  • My tree is getting too tall, can you top it?
  • What are the acceptable reasons for removing a tree?
  • My tree doesn't look like it's doing very well and I'm not sure what to do,what your suggestion?

Contact Saint Petersburg emergency tree services today at (727) 897-5289 for a free consultation from an emergency tree service expert.


Saint Petersburg emergency tree services - Saint Petersburg Tree Services

St. Petersburg, Florida

Nickname(s): St. Pete, Florida's Sunshine City
Motto: Always in Season
Location in Pinellas County and the state of Florida
Coordinates: 27°46′23″N 82°38′24″W
Country     United States
State     Florida
County     Pinellas County
Founded     1876
Incorporated     February 29, 1892
Re-Incorporated as City     June 6, 1903


Area
City     133.1 sq mi (344.7 km2)
Land     59.6 sq mi (154.4 km2)
Water     73.4 sq mi (190.2 km2)
Elevation     44 ft (13.4 m)
Population (2008)
City     248,098
Density     4,162.7/sq mi (1,606.8/km2)
Metro     2,733,761
Time zone     Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)



St. Petersburg is a city in Pinellas County, Florida, United States. It is known as a vacation destination for both American and foreign tourists. As of 2008, the population estimate by the U.S. Census Bureau is 245,314, making St. Petersburg the fourth largest city in the state of Florida and the largest city in Florida that is not a county seat. Although the city of Clearwater is the county seat of Pinellas County, all county services are available through county offices in St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg is the second largest city in the Tampa Bay Area, which is composed of roughly 2.7 million residents, making it the second largest Metropolitan Statistical Area in the state.

The city is often referred to by locals as St. Pete. Neighboring St. Pete Beach formally shortened its name in 1994 after a vote by its residents.

The city is located on a peninsula between Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. It is connected to mainland Florida to the north; with the city of Tampa to the east by causeways and bridges across Tampa Bay; and to Bradenton in the south by the Sunshine Skyway Bridge (Interstate 275), which traverses the mouth of the bay. It is also served by Interstates 175 and 375, which branch off I-275 into the southern and northern areas of downtown respectively. The Gandy Bridge, conceived by George Gandy and opened in 1924, was the first causeway to be built across Tampa Bay, connecting St. Petersburg and Tampa cities without a circuitous 43-mile (69 km) trip around the Bay through Oldsmar.

With a purported average of some 360 days of sunshine each year, it is nicknamed "The Sunshine City." For that reason, the city has long been a popular retirement destination, especially for those in the United States from colder Northern climates. This reputation earned the city the derisive nickname of "God's waiting room". In recent years, though, the population has shifted in a more youthful direction. Despite the trends, Men's Health rated St. Petersburg, FL the "saddest city" in the United States in November 2011. The magazine calculated this ranking using the national government suicide and unemployment rates, as well as the amount of local households using anti-depressant medication and depressive mood surveys."

History
St. Petersburg seen from Spot Satellite

The city was co-founded by John C. Williams, formerly of Detroit, Michigan, who purchased the land in 1876, and by Peter Demens, who was instrumental in bringing the terminus of a railroad there in 1888. St. Petersburg was incorporated on February 29, 1892, when it had a population of only some 300 people.

It was named after Saint Petersburg, Russia, where Peter Demens had spent half of his youth. A local legend says that John C. Williams and Peter Demens flipped a coin to see who would have the honor of naming the city. Peter Demens won and named the city after his home, while John C. Williams named the first hotel after his birthplace, Detroit (a hotel built by Demens). The Detroit Hotel still exists downtown, but has been turned into a condominium. The oldest running hotels are the historic Pier Hotel, built in 1921, formally Hotel Cordova and The Heritage Hotel, built in 1926.

Philadelphia publisher F. A. Davis turned on St. Petersburg's first electrical service in 1897 and its first trolley service in 1904. The city's first major industry was born in 1899 when Henry W. Hibbs, 1862–1942, a native of Newport, North Carolina, established his wholesale fish business at the end of the railroad pier, which extended out to the shipping channel. Within a year, Hibbs Fish Company was shipping more than a thousand pounds (454 kg) of fish each day.
Central Avenue in c. 1910

Dredging of a deeper shipping channel from 1906 to 1908 opened St. Petersburg to larger shipping. Further dredging improved the port facilities through the 1910s. By then the city's population had quadrupled to 4,127.

In 1914, airplane service across Tampa Bay from St. Petersburg to Tampa and back was initiated, generally considered the first commercial airline. The company name was the St. Petersburg–Tampa Airboat Line and the pilot was Tony Jannus, flying a Benoist XIV flying boat. The Tony Jannus Award is presented annually for outstanding achievement in the airline industry. Jannus Landing, a local music/entertainment venue on Central Avenue in downtown, is also named after him.

The city population continued to multiply during the 20th century. Booming in the 1940s and 50s with the advent of air-conditioning and through the 1970s as the town became a popular retirement destination for Americans from midwestern cities, reaching 238,647 in the 1980 census. By that time, however, the population had levelled off, and has grown by only 10,000 since then; this is primarily a result of the city being largely "built out".

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