
Six acres of dense invasive brush - Japanese barberry, autumn olive, multiflora rose - is no small task. These plants don't just grow thick, they grow mean. Barberry has thorns that'll tear through clothing, and multiflora rose can form walls of vegetation that are nearly impossible to push through on foot. When a property owner needs surveyors on site, that kind of growth stops everything cold.
That's exactly the situation we walked into here. The lot was packed with invasive vegetation from edge to edge, and nothing could move forward until it was cleared. So we brought in our forestry mulcher and got to work.
The forestry mulcher is the right tool for this kind of job. It grinds brush, stems, and small trees down into a layer of mulch right on the ground - no hauling, no burning, no massive debris piles to deal with afterward. What you're left with is open, workable ground. That mulch layer actually helps suppress regrowth and breaks down over time, which is a bonus when you're dealing with invasives that would otherwise come back aggressively if just cut.
We covered the full 6 acres and left the lot open and accessible. Surveyors can now move freely across the property without fighting through a wall of thorns. From there, the owner can move forward with whatever comes next - whether that's a full build, site grading, or further planning. The land is ready.
If you've got a lot that's overgrown with invasives and you need to get it cleared before the next phase of your project, this is exactly the kind of work we do. Dense brush doesn't have to be a roadblock.