Spring cleanups
Spring visits clear out winter debris, cut back last year's perennials and ornamental grasses, re-cut bed edges so lines are crisp, and lay fresh mulch at proper depth - enough to suppress weeds and hold moisture without volcano-mulching trees. The yard starts the season looking intentional instead of leftover.
It's also when we flag anything winter damaged - heaved pavers, plow scars, dead shrubs - so small fixes happen before they become summer projects.
Fall cleanups
Fall visits handle leaf removal in rounds as the trees actually drop rather than one premature pass, final cutbacks, and bed prep that protects plantings through the freeze. A clean fall shutdown is the difference between a fast spring green-up and a matted, moldy start.
For our snow customers, the fall cleanup doubles as a route walkthrough - we note stake lines and surface edges before the first snow flies.
One crew, one visit
Cleanups pair naturally with our other work: mulch and edging feed into the mowing season, and bed lines we cut in spring are the same lines we maintain all summer. Bundling cleanup with a seasonal mowing schedule keeps the whole property on one system.
Recent work
Frequently asked questions
When should spring and fall cleanups happen?
Spring cleanups run March through May as beds thaw and dry out. Fall cleanups run October into early December, usually in rounds timed to actual leaf drop rather than a single early pass.
Is mulch included in a cleanup?
Mulch installation is a standard part of most spring cleanups - we quote it by the yard based on bed square footage and discuss color and depth at the walkthrough. Cleanup without mulch is fine too.
What does a seasonal cleanup cost?
We give a firm, itemized number after a free walkthrough - every property is different, and we'd rather measure than guess.
Ready to get started?
Tell us about the project and we'll set up a free walkthrough - usually a same-day reply.
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