Overgrown lots. Fields that haven't been touched in years. Property lines you can't find. Bring in the tracked mulcher and hand it back clean — no hauling, no burning, flat price.
It happens fast in New England. A back lot in Foxborough that was mowed five years ago is now ten-foot sumac and a wall of multiflora rose. A field in Wrentham that used to be open is a full thicket. A property line in Mansfield that's completely lost in brush.
You're not looking at a chainsaw job and a long weekend. You're looking at a tracked forestry mulcher making one methodical pass — and handing you back open, usable land in a day or two.
We work residential lots, idle acreage, inherited land, pre-development clearing, and everything in between. If it's overgrown and in Plainville, Norton, Easton, Rehoboth, Attleboro, or North Attleborough — or up on the big inherited parcels in Middleborough, Carver, Lakeville, Halifax, and Plympton, or on the wooded back-acres of Sherborn, Dover, Concord, Bolton, and Harvard — we've probably done something similar already.
Traditional clearing means cutting, chipping, loading, and hauling — multiple crews, multiple days, dump fees, slash piles. Forestry mulching does it in one pass. The machine grinds brush, saplings, and stumps in place. What's left is a mulch layer that breaks down over one season and feeds the soil.
We run two machines: a compact tracked loader and a mini excavator, both with mulching heads. The loader covers ground fast on open lots and flat runs. The excavator handles tight access, hillsides, and anywhere the terrain makes a bigger machine a bad idea. Steep slopes are common in this region — the excavator is built for that work in a way most clearing equipment isn't.
You get the land back. We sort out which machine gets it done.
Here's what we see most. If yours doesn't fit exactly — call us. It probably still works.
The back portion of a residential property that stopped getting mowed and is now a brush pile. Common in Wrentham, Plainville, Foxborough, and Mansfield. Half a day to a full day depending on density.
Open land that hasn't been managed in years. Field grasses, shrub invasion, early tree colonization. Common on larger parcels in Rehoboth, Seekonk, and Norton. We restore open character without disturbing topsoil.
Lines swallowed by brush — sometimes you can't even find the markers. We clear a defined corridor and leave the edge clean. Comes up constantly in Attleboro, North Attleborough, and Easton.
Clearing before construction, fencing, or landscaping. We work ahead of your timeline in towns like Plainville, Wrentham, and Franklin so grading crews aren't fighting brush.
You didn't let it go. It came to you that way. Whether it's been sitting since an estate was settled or passed down through the family with no one managing it — we've seen it. No judgment, no complicated process. We walk it, quote it flat, and get it done. A lot of folks don't even know what they've got until the brush comes out.
Targeted clearing of multiflora rose, autumn olive, buckthorn, or bittersweet infestations. Heavy in Mansfield, Norton, and Easton corridors. We mulch the root zone and can discuss follow-up treatment options if re-sprouting is a concern.
Opening or restoring foot paths, ATV trails, or access corridors across wooded or brushy land. Popular on larger rural parcels in Rehoboth and Seekonk. We cut a defined width and keep the canopy where you want it.
Reclaiming lake, pond, or river access taken over by brush. We work carefully near water edges and are mindful of buffer regulations. Comes up often on properties near the Ten Mile River and Lake Pearl corridors. Wetland-adjacent? See our wetlands page.
No surprises on the job. Here's what the mulcher takes on.
Multiflora rose, autumn olive, buckthorn, burning bush — all ground to mulch, root system included.
Up to roughly 8–10 inches diameter. Birch, poplar, sumac, locust — handled without excavation or stump grinding afterward.
Blackberry, dewberry, wild raspberry thickets. The kind that make a section of land completely impassable.
Mixed species overgrowth with no dominant plant — just years of accumulated brush. The machine doesn't care what it is.
Leftover stumps from previous clearing work can be ground in the same pass. No separate stump grinding mobilization needed.
Dead or dying trees up to machine capacity, standing or fallen. Cleared, ground, mulched in place.
From first contact to cleared land — here's what happens.
We walk the property with you, get a feel for species density and terrain, and talk through what you want to keep and what goes. You'll get a flat quote before we leave — no estimate ranges, no per-hour guessing.
We confirm access for whichever machine fits the job — gate width, grade to the work area, any terrain that changes the approach. Hillsides, tight lots, and soft ground near water all factor into machine selection. We make that call during the assessment so there are no surprises on the day. Most residential properties in Plainville and surrounding towns are straightforward; we flag anything unusual upfront.
The machine goes to work. Most residential jobs run one to two days. Larger acreage gets scheduled accordingly. We're efficient and focused — you won't have a crew sitting around.
We walk the cleared area with you before we load the machine. The mulch layer left behind is typically two to four inches — it breaks down over a season. If you're seeding or landscaping after, we can talk through timing.
Send us a message and we'll set up a free on-site assessment. We'll look at the land, talk through the scope, and give you a flat number. No commitment, no sales pitch.
If we don't pick up, we're in the machine. Leave a message — we'll call right back.
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