Tree Removal in Tiny, Ontario: What Homeowners Need to Know Before They Start

Tree removal Tiny TownshipFelling, mulching & stumpsMunicipal & MNRF rules

Tree Removal in Tiny Township: What Homeowners Need to Know Before You Start

Removing trees on a Tiny Township property is more involved than it looks \u2014 access, safety, what happens to the wood, and the rules that apply near water. Here is what to sort out first.

Taking down trees on a Tiny Township property is rarely just a chainsaw and an afternoon. There is the safety of felling near homes, lines and neighbours; the question of what happens to the wood and the stumps; and the rules that can apply, especially near water. Getting those sorted before you start is what keeps the job safe, legal and tidy.

This guide walks through what homeowners in Tiny Township should know before removing trees \u2014 the rules, the wood, the stumps, and how to leave the ground usable afterward.

The rules that can apply in Tiny Township

Two things are worth checking before any tree comes down. First, whether the Township of Tiny has a tree-cutting or site-alteration bylaw that restricts removal \u2014 many municipalities do, particularly for larger clearings or near sensitive features, so it is worth confirming for your specific lot. Second, the rules near water. Tiny Township sits outside conservation-authority jurisdiction \u2014 north Simcoe is one of the few parts of Ontario without a CA \u2014 so work near the Georgian Bay shoreline, dunes or wetland is governed by the Ontario Building Code, the provincial Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) and the Township of Tiny, with the Severn Sound Environmental Association (SSEA) providing environmental review. One nuance: the Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority (NVCA) does regulate some shoreline lots in the area, in which case its approval is required.

The takeaway: there is usually no conservation-authority permit in Tiny Township, but that does not mean anything goes near water. We confirm what actually applies to your lot before we start.

What happens to the wood

Every tree that comes down becomes material you have to deal with. You have options, and it is worth deciding up front: chip the brush into mulch you keep, stack firewood-length logs, mill usable timber into lumber on site, or haul it all away. Hauling is simplest; keeping or milling the wood can save you money and put your own trees to use.

We lay out the wood options on the site walk so it is part of the plan \u2014 not a disposal bill you discover at the end.

Stumps: grind or remove?

A stump left in the ground decays slowly, and as it does the ground above it settles. The right approach depends on what is going on top. Grinding reduces the stump below grade and suits landscaped or lightly used areas. Full root removal excavates the whole stump and root ball and is the right call under anything you will build on \u2014 a pad, driveway or septic bed \u2014 where settling cannot be tolerated.

On a Tiny Township lot \u2014 often sandy and near water \u2014 we match the stump approach to the ground and what is going on top.

Removing trees in Tiny Township?

We fell safely, deal with the wood your way, grind or remove stumps, and leave the ground graded and usable. Book a site walk for a written quote.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a permit to remove trees in Tiny Township?

It depends on the lot. Check with the Township of Tiny whether a tree-cutting or site-alteration bylaw applies. Tiny Township sits outside conservation-authority jurisdiction, so there is usually no CA permit \u2014 but near the Georgian Bay shoreline, dunes or wetland, provincial (MNRF) and municipal setbacks apply, and some shoreline lots are regulated by the NVCA. We confirm what your lot needs.

Can I keep the wood?

Yes. We can chip brush into mulch, stack firewood-length logs, mill usable timber on site, or haul it away \u2014 your choice, decided on the site walk.

Should I grind the stumps or have them removed?

Grinding suits landscaped areas; full root removal is needed under anything you will build on, where a decaying stump would cause settling. We decide area by area.

Do you remove trees close to my house?

Yes \u2014 felling near structures, lines and neighbours is routine for us, done in controlled sections where needed for safety.

How do I get a quote?

Book a site walk. We look at the trees, the access and what you want kept or hauled, and give you a written price.