The Hagerstown Maple That Came Through the Kitchen Ceiling
One homeowner called us at 6:47 a.m. after a 55 mph gust dropped a 60 year old silver maple across the back half of her ranch. The trunk landed on the kitchen, and water was already running down the pendant light over her sink. Our on call crew was on site in just under two hours with a 30 by 40 reinforced tarp, ladder jacks, and a chainsaw to clear the working area. We did not touch the trunk itself (that is a tree service job, and mixing the two trades is how people get hurt), but we sealed everything from the eave to the ridge before lunch.
What surprised her was the damage map once we got up there. The visible hole was about four feet wide. The actual compromised decking, once we traced the impact lines and the secondary branch strikes, ran closer to fourteen feet. Three rafters were cracked. Her insurance adjuster met us on the roof two days later, and because we had photos from every stage of the tarping, the claim moved fast. Total roof replacement with upgraded synthetic underlayment came in around $18,400, of which she paid only her deductible.
One detail worth mentioning: she almost called a general handyman first because he was cheaper for the tarp. We talked her out of it on the phone. A poorly anchored tarp in a wind event becomes a sail, and we have been called to clean up after that exact scenario more than once. Proper dry in uses sandbags or batten strips fastened into solid framing, not just nails through shingles, and it has to extend well past the visible damage zone to account for wind driven rain.
The Branch That Did Not Look Like Much
A homeowner in a West College Street / Library District subdivision called about a limb that had fallen the previous weekend. He had pulled it off himself, swept the shingle granules out of his gutters, and figured he was fine. He only called us because his wife noticed a faint brown ring on the hallway ceiling.
We climbed up expecting to find one or two cracked shingles. What we actually found was a puncture about the size of a quarter where a smaller branch had speared straight through the shingle, the underlayment, and into the OSB. Rain had been wicking in for six days. The insulation above his hallway was soaked, and the drywall was one heavy storm away from sagging. The repair itself took half a day and ran about $675, but if he had waited another month, we would have been talking about framing repair and ceiling replacement on top of it.
The lesson we share with every Hagerstown homeowner: tree damage is not always loud. Our free roof inspection exists exactly for this reason. If a tree of any size touched your roof, get eyes on it before you assume nothing happened.
The Replacement That Was Not Actually Needed
One of our favorite stories: a homeowner called convinced he needed a full tear off after a large limb hit his roof during a spring storm. Two other contractors had already quoted him for replacement, both above $14,000. We sent a project manager out, spent about 90 minutes on the roof, and found that the impact had only damaged eleven shingles in one concentrated area. The decking underneath was sound. We did a targeted roof repair for $1,180 and color matched the shingles within one shade. Three years later that roof is still going strong. We meant what we said about telling you when replacement is not needed.
The Commercial Property in a Microburst
A property manager in central Indiana called us after a July microburst dropped two large oaks across a small office building. The flat roof took most of the hit. There were three obvious tears in the TPO membrane, plus standing water pooling around the HVAC curbs where the deck had flexed.
This one was a coordination job more than a roofing job. We worked alongside the tree service, the insurance adjuster, and the building owner over about three weeks. The first 48 hours were emergency dry in. The next two weeks were documentation, scope agreement, and material staging. The actual membrane repair took four days. If you manage a building, our commercial roofing team handles this kind of multi trade response regularly, and the documentation we provide tends to make the claim conversation a lot shorter.
One thing the property manager told us afterward stuck with the whole crew. She said the hardest part was not the damage itself but figuring out who was responsible for what. The tree service wanted to start cutting before we had finished photographing the impact pattern. The adjuster wanted scope before the membrane was even visible under the debris. Hagerstown Metal Roofing ended up acting as the unofficial traffic cop on site, and we have done that role enough times now that we have a written sequence we follow on every commercial tree call.
What We Tell Every Caller in the First Five Minutes
When the phone rings and a tree is on someone's house, we walk through a short list before we ever quote anything:
- Is anyone hurt, and is the structure safe to be inside? If not, you call 911 and your utility before you call us.
- Is the tree still in contact with power lines? If yes, nobody goes near it until the utility clears it.
- Take photos from the ground, every angle you can safely reach, before anything moves.
- Call your insurance carrier to open the claim, but do not wait on them to authorize emergency tarping. Most policies cover reasonable mitigation.
- Get a roofer on site for dry in within 24 hours, sooner if it is actively raining.
The Neighbor Who Waited Three Weeks
A Hagerstown homeowner called us in late October about a leak in his master bedroom. During the conversation he mentioned that a neighbor's silver maple had dropped a large limb on his roof back in early October, but he had not seen any leaks at the time so he let it go. By the time we got on the roof, the cracked shingles had been holding back three weeks of rain, and the deck under that section had darkened and softened. The repair that would have been about $900 in early October ended up at $2,750 because we had to replace a four by eight section of decking and treat the rafter tops with a borate solution. Time matters more than people think with tree impact, even when nothing looks wrong from the ground.