Reclaim Usable Land
Brush, saplings, and undergrowth swallow pasture, fence lines, and building sites. Clearing turns wasted acreage back into land you can graze, build on, or actually walk through.
Land Clearing FAQ
Thinking about clearing a lot, pasture, or acreage in North Texas? Here are honest answers to the questions we hear most — so you know exactly what to expect before you ever pick up the phone.
Why It's Worth It
Overgrowth costs you usable acreage, water, and value. Here's what you get back.
Brush, saplings, and undergrowth swallow pasture, fence lines, and building sites. Clearing turns wasted acreage back into land you can graze, build on, or actually walk through.
Ashe juniper ("cedar") and mesquite spread fast and crowd out native grass — and a single mature cedar can drink thousands of gallons of water a year. Clearing them frees up water and grazing for what you want growing.
Dense, dry brush is fuel. Thinning overgrowth and keeping defensible space around homes and barns makes your place safer through a dry North Texas summer.
Clean, usable land shows better and is worth more — whether you're selling, building, running livestock, or just want your place back.
Removing invasive brush lets native grasses and forbs come back — better for cattle and for deer, turkey, and quail.
Clear fence rows, trails, food plots, and building pads so the rest of your plans can finally happen.
How We Work
We're not a one-machine outfit. We match the approach to the job, the terrain, and your budget.
For heavy brush, saplings, tall weeds, and overgrown pasture — the fastest way to reclaim acreage that's gotten away from you, and to keep it maintained afterward.
We clear what needs to go and protect the trees you want to keep. Tell us what stays — mature oaks, pecans, shade trees — and we work around them.
Trees, stumps, and undergrowth removed for homesites, building pads, and fence lines — leaving you ground you can build on or use.
Plowing, discing, and prep for food plots, gardens, pasture renovation, or getting raw land ready to plant or build.
Haul it off, pile it for burning where it's allowed, or mulch it back into the ground. We'll talk through the best option for your land and budget before we start.
Common Questions
It comes down to three things: how many acres, how thick the growth is, and how you want the debris handled. A light brush-hog on open pasture costs far less than clearing heavy timber with stump removal and haul-off. That's why we look at it in person and give you a clear, fair quote up front — no guessing and no surprise charges. Estimates are free.
Yes. We do selective clearing all the time. Walk the property with us or flag the trees you want kept, and we'll clear around them — mature oaks, pecans, and shade trees stay put.
Your choice. We can haul it off, pile it for burning where local rules allow, or mulch it on-site so it breaks back down into the soil. We'll recommend what makes the most sense for your property and budget.
Fall and winter are ideal — the ground is firmer, growth is dormant, and you avoid disturbing nesting birds in spring. That said, we work year-round; if you've got a project, reach out and we'll find the right window.
It depends on your city, county, and whether you're in an HOA or floodplain. Many rural and agricultural tracts need nothing; some municipalities and HOAs have rules, and burning is subject to county burn bans. We'll point you in the right direction, but the property owner is responsible for confirming local requirements.
A small overgrown lot can be a single day. Multi-acre clearing usually runs a few days depending on density and terrain. We'll give you a realistic timeline with your quote and work around your schedule.
Yes. We're flexible and match the approach to the terrain. If conditions are tricky, we'll tell you straight and plan around it.
We do. Many folks have us clear once, then come back to brush-hog or mow on a regular basis to keep it from growing back. One-time or recurring — your call.
We're based in Argyle and serve Denton County and the surrounding counties across North Texas. Got a larger tract a bit farther out? Just ask.
Tell us about your land and we'll give you a straight answer and a free, no-pressure quote.