What the work involved

The first ask was straightforward and practical: clear brush back from the fence line so the owner's equipment could move the property without constant window damage or blind corners.

That first scope led into a broader mix of underbrushing, land clearing, and grading work across a much larger tract than the company had been handling in routine neighborhood service routes.

Why it mattered

The job proved that the company could travel, plan, and execute on larger properties where access, visibility, and long-term land use mattered just as much as speed.

It also reinforced a pattern that still shapes the business: practical scopes, honest equipment choices, and work that respects how the owner will actually use the land afterward.

What carried forward

Today that same approach shows up in Gulf Coast clearing and grading work: protect what needs to stay, open what needs to work, and price the job around the real terrain instead of a generic estimate.