Plant Health CareISA Certified Tree Health Services
Diagnostic assessment, deep root fertilization, soil management, pest and disease treatments — keeping trees throughout Nevada and Placer Counties healthy for decades to come.
Keep Your Trees Healthy — Before They Become a Removal
Most tree removals are preventable. Behind every dead or structurally failed tree is usually a period of gradual decline — drought stress, compacted soils, pest pressure, or disease — that went undiagnosed and untreated. Plant health care (PHC) is the proactive approach to tree management: monitoring tree condition, identifying problems early, and intervening before damage becomes irreversible.
Powell Arbor Solutions provides ISA Certified Arborist-led plant health care throughout Nevada and Placer Counties. David Powell brings both the diagnostic skill to identify what's actually wrong with a tree and the treatment knowledge to address it correctly. Our PHC services range from single-visit diagnostic consultations to ongoing monitoring programs for high-value trees on residential properties and larger rural parcels.
Healthy trees are also safer trees. A well-maintained tree with sound root structure, adequate nutrition, and no active decay is substantially less likely to fail during a wind event or storm — which is particularly relevant in the Sierra Nevada foothills where large pines and oaks commonly grow near homes. PHC and arborist reports work together to give you a clear picture of the health and risk profile of your trees.
ISA-Guided Tree Health Services
From diagnostic evaluation to targeted treatment, our PHC services are grounded in arboricultural science.
Certified Arborist-Led Tree Health Management
Tree health decisions require expertise. Here's why property owners across Nevada and Placer Counties trust David Powell with their most valuable trees.
Plant Health Care FAQs
What homeowners in Grass Valley, Auburn, Nevada County, and Placer County ask most about tree health and diagnostics.
Plant health care (PHC) is a systematic, science-based approach to maintaining tree health — going beyond pruning to address the underlying conditions that determine whether a tree thrives or declines. It includes soil analysis, root zone management, deep root fertilization, pest and disease diagnosis, targeted treatments, and monitoring over time. An ISA Certified Arborist manages PHC by observing trees across visits and making informed decisions based on what they see.
Possibly yes — it depends on the cause. Oak decline in the Sierra Nevada foothills has several potential causes: Sudden Oak Death (Phytophthora ramorum), Gold Spotted Oak Borer (GSOB), drought stress, root zone compaction, or soil-borne pathogens. Some of these are treatable; others are not. A proper diagnostic evaluation — including visual inspection, sometimes resistograph testing, and observation of symptom patterns — will determine whether intervention can help. We recommend an arborist assessment before any treatment decisions.
Deep root fertilization delivers nutrients and soil amendments directly into the root zone via injection — bypassing compacted surface soil to reach feeder roots at the depth where uptake actually occurs. It's appropriate for trees showing signs of nutrient deficiency (yellowing leaves, thinning canopy, reduced growth), trees under stress from construction activity nearby, or older trees in landscapes where soil health has declined. It's not a cure-all — effectiveness depends on accurate diagnosis of the underlying problem first.
Yes — several are significant in this region. Gold Spotted Oak Borer (GSOB) is an invasive beetle that attacks and kills California oaks; it has been found in parts of El Dorado and Placer Counties. Western pine beetle and Ips engraver beetles affect drought-stressed pines. Sudden Oak Death (Phytophthora) affects tan oak and some other species. Bark beetle activity spikes significantly during drought years. David Powell can assess your specific trees for signs of these and other locally relevant threats.
Yes — Powell Arbor Solutions uses resistograph testing as part of structural assessment for trees with suspected internal decay. A resistograph is a micro-drill device that measures resistance as it passes through wood, creating a profile that reveals hollow sections, decay columns, and wood density changes that are not visible from the outside. This is particularly useful for assessing large, mature trees before a pruning or removal decision.