Arlington Tree Co.
Upper Arlington, Ohio — Tree City USA
Boutique tree care for UA's most cherished properties. Hand tools where possible. Slow, attentive work. By someone who grew up on these streets.
or call: (614) 312-2979
No obligation. I'll call or text you back same day.
What your trees need now.
Structural pruning, deadwood removal, and canopy shaping. Hand tools first. We work with the tree's natural form, not against it.
Ask about this →Surgical repair of lawnmower damage, bark tears, and prior improper cuts. Sterile razor work to shape wounds for proper compartmentalization.
Ask about this →Observational diagnosis of pest pressure, fungal issues, structural defects, and decline. Honest evaluation — no upsell.
Ask about this →Early structural pruning prevents costly problems at maturity. The best investment you can make in a tree is when it's young.
Ask about this →Hanging limbs, split leaders, debris on the roof. After a significant storm I reach out to Tree Steward clients first. Walk-ins welcome too — call or text and I'll assess same day when I can.
Ask about this →When a big job needs a crew, or the utility company wants to hack your canopy, you need someone in your corner who speaks the language. I'll walk the job with you, help you evaluate bids, and make sure the work gets spec'd right. Show up the morning of with Tremont Goodie Shop doughnuts for the guys.
Ask about this →I imagine Upper Arlington as our orchard.
A hundred-tree apple orchard in Pennsylvania was enough to teach me that you can't manage what you don't know. A hundred acres of old-growth forest on the Olympic Peninsula was enough to teach me that the work is never done — only tended. One zip code of mature canopy in Tree City USA is the same covenant, simply more focused.
Most tree problems don't announce themselves. They build quietly — a pest taking hold, a branch losing attachment, a root zone slowly compacting. By the time you notice, the work is bigger than it needed to be.
The Tree Steward program is a standing relationship. I make my orchard round on a regular schedule — checking in on bugs, watching for what's changed season to season. After a storm I reach out before you have to call.
You get someone who knows your trees. I get a route worth driving.
David All · UA '97
I grew up in Upper Arlington — starting on Chester, moving to Henthorn for middle and high school, and finally Ashmore. I traded in the lacrosse stick for the pole saw, but the footwork's the same. My roots here go back generations: my grandparents, the Seegers, raised my father and aunt on Wesleyan and were founding members of UA Lutheran Church.
I returned to Upper Arlington after my father passed away. Walking past Jones and Barrington, I was moved by the ancient Oaks — the living vision of the stewards who built this neighborhood. My career had taken me all over the world. My roots stayed here.
I spent my youth under one of the tallest oak canopies in the city. In middle school, I wrote a poem called 'Tree Heaven' that was published in the UA News. My parents planted trees everywhere we lived in UA; today, those trees are thriving.
What I brought back wasn't just a business plan — it was a practitioner's path. From old-growth forests on the Olympic Peninsula to heritage apple orchards in Pennsylvania, I learned that a tree is a patient, not a project. Antiseptic tools, clean angles, and the nightly walk to see what has changed.
Arlington Tree Co. is an honest way to make a living. I work the streets I grew up on, using a few razor-sharp tools from my grandfather's collection to care for what's been here longer than any of us.
"His goal would be to protect the trees —
Carefully inspect and adore each of the leaves.
Giving back from his heart all that's inside
Like the star inside the apple, the glint in Adam's eye."
— David All · 2025
Heritage apple orchard · Spring Mills, PA
Roots
Tremont · Jones · UAHS '97
Upper Arlington born and raised
Field Experience
Orchard management, Laurel Spring Cidery — PA
Old-growth stewardship, Olympic Peninsula — WA
Nature program leader, Millbrook Marsh Nature Center — PA
Credential
Member, Ohio Chapter ISA
ISA Certified Arborist — in progress
Research
Co-author, "Opioid Treatment Deserts"
PLOS ONE · Ohio State University · 2021
Tools & Practice
Silky saws · Felco pruners · Yoshiaki bonsai shears · Yoshihiro Tsubaki blade oil. Hand-sharpened. Great Grandpa Gammon's pole saw. The Stihl when diameter requires it. Nothing synthetic touches the cut.
Approach
Hand tools first.
Slow work. Done right.
Snap three photos. Our AI identifies the species in under a minute. Walk your neighborhood and discover what's growing around you.
Identify a Tree Free →No account needed. Works on any phone.
The second best time is now. Whether replacing one that came down or adding shade for the next generation — it starts with the right tree in the right place. Site analysis, soil testing, and three recommendations matched to your property.
Text David to Schedule → Browse trees on CanopyKeep →Not Columbus-wide. Not all directions. UA has a distinct character — mature canopy, a community that genuinely cares about its trees, and a Tree City USA designation since 1990. That focus lets us do better work.
The annexation map tells the story. The oldest neighborhoods — Old Arlington, the original neighborhoods — carry the deepest canopy. Later annexations filled in around them. The trees track the history. Knowing when a neighborhood was built tells you what's growing there and what it needs next.
Serving zip codes 43220 and 43221.
Tree City USA — Upper Arlington
Annexation Map courtesy of the Upper Arlington Public Library, UA Archives & the City of Upper Arlington
No obligation. Tell me what you're seeing and I'll respond within one business day.
Text is fastest — I respond same day.