Davey Tree Flipbooks

Davey Bulletin January-February 2025

The Davey Tree Expert Company provides residential and commercial tree service and landscape service throughout North America. Read our Flipbooks for helpful tips and information on proper tree and lawn care.

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10 THE DAVEY BULLETIN | January/February 2025 MISSION WASHINGTON BOMB CYCLONE A late November bomb cyclone left Washington state's Puget Sound region with close to 1 million power outages, according to Micah Fazio, area manager, Pacific Northwest, Davey Tree Surgery Company. Seven, three-person Surgery Company crews from the Seattle City Light and Snohomish County PUD accounts assisted both utilities, as well as the Seattle Department of Transportation, to clear trees off of power lines and roads for one week. "This storm was labeled as a decade storm, meaning we hadn't had a storm like this in about 10 years," Fazio said. "Our prevailing winds are typically from the southwest. With this storm, the way that the cyclone was spinning off the coast – it was drawing all the air from east to west. The wind was coming from a different direction and that's what made it so catastrophic." Fazio said their clients were very happy with Davey's response and sent letters thanking the crews. All field employees in the Residential/Commercial services' Southeast Seattle, Northwest Seattle, and Tacoma offices worked on storm cleanup for several weeks, with additional work expected in the coming months for the Southeast Seattle and Tacoma offices. Jason Hayes, district manager, Southeast Seattle office, said Michael Spaulding, district manager, Portland, Oregon office, assisted, along with six employees from that office. The West Denver office's Anthony Difronzo, tree care coordinator, along with the North Denver office's foremen Devon Premer and Maxwell Olsen, traveled in to assist for several weeks. Two additional West Denver office employees, foremen Alex Von Kreisler and Ryan Pinto, traveled to the Tacoma office to assist with storm cleanup for a few weeks. "They were a huge help," Tyson Geldseth, district manager, Tacoma office, said. "Everyone was on the same page and was getting along." Jason Maize, district manager, Northwest Seattle office, said his crews were happy to help the community. While done with storm cleanup for now, he said calls may come in off and on for months, when people find storm damage they didn't notice until later. Right: Jason Hayes, district manager, Southeast Seattle office, is pictured on a sales call, in front of the gigantic root ball of a Western red cedar tree that fell on a client's property in Sammamish, Washington, post-bomb cyclone. Nathan Weldon, climber, Snohomish PUD account, is removing branches from a communication wire. Left: Seattle City Light account's Frank Bartholomew, foreman, Ian Publicover, climber, and Bryce Stetson, groundperson, removed the wood of this ash tree that was hanging off the sides of the bus, to prepare for SDOT's grapple truck to lift the remaining wood off the top of it. "The road was opened up to traffic after we cleared five or six large ash trees from it," Micah Fazio said.

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