








This one was a full reset. The land had old fencing that had seen better days - posts leaning at every angle, wire sagging into the brush, and years of overgrowth swallowing what used to be usable pasture. Before any new fencing could go in, all of that had to come out first.
We pulled rotten wooden posts, old metal pipe fence, cattle panels, and everything in between. Nothing gets left behind. A dumpster full of scrap metal and a trailer loaded with old posts tells you just how much material was cleared off this property. When you're prepping land for livestock, cutting corners on the demo phase creates problems down the road - loose debris, hidden hazards, uneven ground that makes setting new posts a headache.
The brush clearing was just as important as the fence work. We ran the tracked skid steer through the overgrown sections, cutting everything down and chipping it in place. That kind of ground-level clearing is what actually makes a pasture usable again. It's not just about looks - it's about giving your animals a safe, manageable space and giving yourself a clean line to work with when the new fencing goes in.
That's the thing most people don't think about until they're standing in the middle of it. Getting land ready for animals isn't a one-step job. It's demo, clearing, grading, and then fencing. Each step has to be done right or the next one suffers. We handle all of it - from pulling the old stuff out to getting the ground smooth and ready for whatever comes next.