Founded in 1986 by Lewis Ruberg, Lewis Tree Care,Inc. can handle your tree pruning and removal needs "from the smallest dogwood to the largest oak". Lewis Ruberg is president of the company and an ISA (International Society of Arboriculture) Certified Arborist (PD-0132A) with 40+ years experience in the tree and landscape industry.

Arborist Ruberg is also a member of the Cheltenham Township Shade Tree Advisory Committee, where he uses his expertise in aboriculture and landscaping to guide land development projects and to encourage new tree plantings.

Based in Elkins Park, PA, Lewis Tree care, Inc. serves neighborhoods within a 5 mile radius, including, but not limited to, Cheltenham, Jenkintown, Abington, Willow Grove, Glenside, Rockledge, Huntingdon Valley, Mt. Airy, Chestnut Hill, Oak lane, Burholme.

Home Improvement Contractor Registration PA-28570

Do your trees need help. Call Lewis Tree Care, Inc. if you have dead trees, dead branches, branches too low over lawn or too close to the house, too much shade on the lawn, hazardous trees, oversize trees, rotten or leaning trees.

Lewis Tree Care, Inc. can help you with storm damage cleanup, tree and stump removal,tree pruning/trimming, overgrown bush trimming or removal, brush removal.

Though the main focus of Lewis Tree Care, Inc. is tree pruning and removal, in order to have a sustainable green environment, Arborist Ruberg encourages clients that have had trees removed to replant, where appropriate, with new trees and bushes.

Emerald Ash Borer alert! "Ash borer threatens trees in Phila. region. Experts warn the insect could kill all the city's ash trees in 5-7 years", Philadelphia Inquirer 3/31/2016. The future for ash trees is very bleak. In the areas that have been infested with the borer, ash tree mortality is almost 100%. This is a much more serious problem than say the infamous Dutch elm disease, by which millions of elms have been killed, though many millions continue to live. Not so with ashes, they will all die! And what makes the ash situation more serious than the elm problem is in the way the ashes will die- elms show dead leaves as the branches die, but ashes infected with emerald ash borer start to drop branches before there is any visible signs of decline. And, for that reason, Lewis Tree Care, Inc. does not recommend insecticide treatments of ash trees, especially large ashes. Such treatments, which cannot realistically be 100% effective, would leave some portion of the tree (unknown from ground level) unprotected and vulnerable to breakage, giving the tree owner a false sense of security.  So, for safety's sake, start thinking about removing your ash trees before they become a problem. And for the environment and future generations, start thinking about replanting with a different type of tree.