About Us

James Fuller Arboriculture is a specialist arboricultural practice committed to trees and their environment. We provide advice to the private, public and commercial sectors that require a professional and personal service within the field of arboriculture.

This year we have been working on large development sites for the commercial sector in Berkshire, Hampshire and Oxfordshire, small development sites for the private and commercial sector throughout the UK. Health and Safety Audits for the private sector in Hampshire and Berkshire. TPO reviews for the private and public sector in Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Essex. Planting schemes for the private, public and commercial sector in Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Surrey and mortgage reports for the private sector in Hampshire.

James Fuller Arboriculture works with clients who require the highest of quality to meet their specific needs.

We believe that trees and people should be able to live in unity and benefit from a well-designed environment. We work hard and take pride in every aspect of our work, providing clients with straightforward clear advice.

Founder, James Fuller, has over 7 years experience within the field of Arboriculture and has attained a Foundation Degree in Arboriculture (FDSc Arb.) and a BTEC National Diploma in Forestry & Arboriculture (BTEC Nat.Dip. Forestry & Arb.).

James is also a Technical Member of the Arboricultural Association (TechArborA) and has successfully completed the Professional Tree Inspector’s, Capital Asset Value for Amenity Trees (CAVAT), Quantified Tree Risk Assessment (QTRA) and Visual Tree Assessment (VTA) Courses.

James previously worked as an Arboricultural Consultant, providing professional advice in relation to trees for one of the leading arboricultural consultancy practices in the country. As part of this role James was instrumental in providing clients with advice from the initial Tree Survey through to site completion and sign off.

‘James has experience of working on a variety of sites throughout the UK, from individual Visual Tree Assessments (VTA) to large development sites (BS5837: 2012) with 1000’s of trees.