FULL-TIME tree-worker position available at Snell Tree Experts
Starting pay is $16.00 - $25.00 (based on experience, skills, etc.)
Experience is a big plus, but we will train the right individual.
You MUST have a valid NC driver’s license and a good driving record of at least 4 years (a plus if you have your CDL).
You must be able to drive a stick shift or willing to learn.
You must be able to lift and carry 75+ lbs., be able to take hot and cold weather, have physical stamina, and want to work for a company that values honesty, integrity, and doing the right thing.
*Military background is a big plus.
It is also a plus if you have the desire to learn to climb. We will train you and supply the necessary equipment needed.
We believe in rewarding workers for doing a great job. We are seeking applicants who are team players, athletic, organized, leaders, good problem solvers, hard-working, ethical, take instruction well, and have a great attitude. We encourage professional education and promote by merit accordingly. We train you to be an arborist.
Benefits:
PTO (sick days/vacation)
Health Insurance
Retirement Account
Paid Holidays
Job Education Reimbursement
Great Work Environment
Pay is competitive based on skills, experience, education, etc.
We DO check your background and references and require drug testing.
We are a TCIA Accredited tree-care company.
We are an equal opportunity employer.
*Please submit an application through our website at SnellTreeExperts.com OR you can pick up an application from the front door of our office at 6524 US 401 in Fuquay Varina. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
SNELL TREE EXPERTS LLC
Tree Worker
Unloading the mini-skid. (Optical illusion: Power lines are 60’-70’ behind truck.)
Dismantling a dead sycamore that is too dangerous to climb and too tall to fell (power lines surrounding it).
Prepping to stow the grapple.
Using an Air Spade to expose a crepe myrtle’s girdling roots.
Adan doing a root-collar excavation of a crepe myrtle with girdling roots. First he uses the Air Spade, then he uses special tools to remove the strangling roots.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/07/climate/new-england-trees-forests.html
NYTIMES.COM
New England’s Forests Are Sick. They Need More Tree Doctors.
The crew rigging down an 85’ pine tree this morning. The large sweetgum is the stationary “crane” off of which the crew rigged.
A job in Lillington, off Old US 421.
Removing two dead white pines with the knuckle-boom.
We finished this job in Raleigh so early that we didn’t get to take a before pic. The blue tool set is on top of the stump of the dead pine we removed.
A longer clip of removing a tree section—the safest way to d tree work is from the ground! (‘Sorry for the grainy video, but, hey, it’s wood!)
Short clip of “The Beast” lowering a large limb to the ground.
Mechanized tree removal!
Lowering an 800-lb section of limb that was just cut with the remote-controlled saw.
Dropping off the large limbs on the ground with the grapple.
Our trucks here at a job in Kipling, NC, showed up in the nation’s leading tree-care industry magazine.