Linear and site-scale clearing is a different discipline from residential work. The acreage is bigger, the specs are written down, and the schedule usually belongs to someone else's project plan. Here is what these jobs demand and how we run them.
What this work includes
- Utility rights-of-way: initial cuts and reclears along power, gas, and water corridors
- Access easements: clearing and maintaining legal access routes across parcels
- Solar and commercial sites: vegetation removal ahead of civil work on large pads
- Fence lines and boundaries: long-run clearing for agricultural and timber tracts
What matters on these projects
- Production rate you can schedule around. Mulching corridors is steady, measurable work. We quote in acres or linear feet with a realistic daily rate, and we hit it.
- Erosion and buffer compliance. Corridor work crosses drainages. Mulching in place keeps ground cover on the disturbance, and state stream buffers get respected. See our guide to Georgia clearing rules.
- Documentation. Certificates of insurance, W-9s, daily progress reporting if the GC wants it. Paperwork is part of the job, not an afterthought.
- A machine that travels. Our CAT track loader and mulcher move on our own trailer. Mobilizing to a corridor two counties away is normal, not exceptional. That reach is covered on our statewide land clearing page.
Who we work with
General contractors, utility contractors, solar EPCs, timber and land management companies, and landowners with easement obligations. Veteran-owned, owner-operated: the person quoting the corridor is the person in the cab.
Bidding a project or need a subcontractor who shows up? Call (706) 936-4615 or send plans through the quote form and we will respond with a preliminary number.
