Tell Us About the Lot
Send us the basics on your property and what you are dealing with, an overgrown lot, a wooded area to open up, brush taking over, or ground that needs clearing before anything else can go in, and we’ll set up a time to come take a look and get you an estimate.
What's Included in Our Land Clearing
Land clearing is the first move on a property that has gotten overgrown, wooded, or out of hand, the work that takes a lot you cannot use and opens it back up.
The job is pulling out the brush, undergrowth, and small trees that have taken over, then cleaning up and hauling off what comes out, so you are left with open, usable ground instead of a mess. It is almost always the groundwork that has to happen first, before the ground can be reshaped or anything new can go in, which is why we line it up ahead of the rest of a project.
We open up the lot, clear it down to workable ground, and leave it ready for the next step. Once a lot is cleared, the ground usually needs to be reshaped, so we move straight into grading, and from there into planting or whatever the property calls for.

What Our Land Clearing Covers
Brush and Undergrowth Removal
The thick of most overgrown lots is brush and undergrowth, the tangle of low scrub, briars, and vines that takes over a property left alone for a few seasons. We cut and clear it down to the ground, working through the whole lot rather than just knocking back the edges that show from the road.
Vines get pulled off the trees and fences they have climbed, and the root masses get dealt with where they would otherwise send the same growth right back up in a season. What was an impassable wall of growth opens back up, so you can walk the lot, see the property lines, and actually use the space again. That clearing is the step that turns a lot you have written off into ground you can work with.
Small Tree and Tree Line Clearing
Left alone, a lot fills in with small trees and volunteer growth, the seedlings that seed themselves in and turn a yard into young woods in a few years. We take out the small trees and saplings and thin or open the growth where it has crowded in, clearing what does not belong while keeping the established trees worth keeping. Along the property lines, the tree lines that have grown messy and closed off the yard get opened back up, so the edge of the lot reads as a line again instead of a wall of scrub.
On the larger, more rural lots up around Green Creek and Del Haven, opening up an overgrown tree line is often the biggest part of getting a property back. We work around what stays, so the lot ends up open and usable, not stripped bare.
Lot Cleanup and Haul-Off
Clearing a lot makes a lot of material, and a property covered in cut brush, branches, and debris is not actually cleared, it is just rearranged. We gather and haul off everything that comes out of the lot, the brush, the cut growth, the small trees, and the debris underneath it, so what is left is open ground and not a field of piles. Hauling it off is part of the job, not an extra you are left to burn, chip, or pay someone else to drag away.
We clear the ground down clean as we work, so when we leave, the lot reads as opened up and finished instead of a job stopped halfway. You are left with usable space, not the wreckage of clearing it.
Grade Prep for What Comes Next
Clearing is rarely the end of the job, it is what makes the rest of it possible, so we clear with whatever comes next already in mind. We take the growth out at the ground and clear the surface debris, so the lot is left workable rather than a stubble of cut-off stumps and roots sitting in the way of the next step.
From there the ground is ready to be reshaped, so we can move straight into grading the lot and then into sod, beds, or a hardscape install. Lining the clearing and the prep up in one pass is what keeps a property from sitting half-done for months between the clearing and the build. The point is a lot that is not just emptied out but actually ready to put to use.
What Good Land Clearing Does for a Property
A lot that has grown over is a lot you cannot use, and clearing it is what turns wasted, impassable ground back into usable property. Beyond just opening up the space, clearing is what makes everything else possible, you cannot grade, plant, sod, or build on ground that is buried under brush and small trees, so the clearing is the move that unlocks the rest of the project.
An overgrown lot also drags down a whole property and reads as neglected from the road, where a cleared, open one reads as a place that is being taken care of and put to use. On the larger, more rural lots down here, where growth comes back fast and a property can disappear into brush in a few seasons, clearing is often the first real step toward getting it back.












