Brush Removal in Pinehurst, TX

Overgrown with yaupon, briars, and scrub? We clear the brush and give you back open, usable ground.

Brush Removal in Pinehurst

Brush has a way of taking over land in Montgomery County. Leave a lot alone for a few seasons and yaupon, briars, privet, sweetgum, and second-growth scrub fill in until you cannot walk it, fence it, or see across it. We clear that brush and give you usable ground again. Depending on the property and your goal, we handle it with forestry mulching that grinds the brush in place, or with cutting and removal where you want the material gone — clearing overgrown lots and acreage, reclaiming pasture and fields lost to scrub, opening up sight lines and trails, and cleaning up around homes, barns, ponds, and fence lines. East Texas brush grows back fast and grows back thick, so we also talk through what it takes to keep it down once it is cleared. Tell us how much you have and what is growing in it, and we will give you a straight price and a plan to take the land back.

Brush Removal in Pinehurst, TX

Land clearing in Pinehurst

Pinehurst is a wooded community in southwest Montgomery County along FM-1488, between Magnolia and the Tomball area, named for the tall pines that fill it. It is a sought-after spot for homes on wooded acreage, and as the 1488 corridor has boomed, raw timber land here is being cleared for homesites and small subdivisions. The land is heavily timbered — tall loblolly pines, post oak, sweetgum, and a thick yaupon and brush understory — on rolling, generally well-drained ground. We clear lots and acreage throughout the Pinehurst area, from single wooded homesites to small acreage tracts along and off FM-1488. We forestry mulch underbrush, remove brush and trees, grind stumps, clear fence and property lines, and grub and prep build pads. Folks here almost always want to keep their pines — the trees are the whole appeal of the area — so selective clearing that opens the homesite and drive while protecting the mature pines is exactly what we do. Tell us about the property and which trees you want kept, and we will give you a straight price and a plan that leaves you a homesite in the pines.

  • Yaupon, briars, privet, sweetgum, and scrub cleared out
  • Overgrown lots, pastures, and fields reclaimed
  • Brush cleared around homes, barns, ponds, and fence lines
  • Mulched in place or cut and removed — your choice and your lot
  • Sight lines, trails, and access reopened
  • Honest plan for keeping the brush down after clearing

Need brush removal elsewhere? See all of our Pinehurst services or brush removal across Montgomery County.

Brush Removal in Pinehurst

Tell us about the property and we’ll call you back — local Pinehurst land clearing.

Prefer to talk now? Call (936) 555-0164.

Areas We Cover in Pinehurst

In town or up a cove — if it’s in or around Pinehurst, we come to your property.

  • Decker Prairie
  • Mostyn Manor
  • Lake Windcrest area
  • Egypt
  • FM-1488 corridor
  • Spring Branch

Common Clearing Scenarios in Pinehurst

The land clearing jobs we see most around here — and how we handle them.

Homesites in the tall pines

Pinehurst is known for its tall loblolly pines, and people want homesites tucked into them. We do selective clearing — mulching the understory and opening the build pad and drive — while protecting the mature pines, so the finished home sits in the woods that drew you there.

Growth along the 1488 corridor

As FM-1488 has boomed, wooded land in Pinehurst is being cleared for homesites and small subdivisions. We turn those timber tracts into clean, buildable ground while keeping the trees worth keeping and protecting the rolling, well-drained soil.

Thick yaupon under the canopy

Beneath the pines, yaupon and brush form a dense understory that makes the woods impassable. Mulching it out gives you open, walkable, park-like woods with your pines still standing — a popular job in Pinehurst.

Brush Removal in Pinehurst — FAQs

Do you clear land in Pinehurst and along FM-1488?
Yes. We clear lots and acreage throughout Pinehurst and the surrounding FM-1488 corridor toward Magnolia and Tomball. Tell us where the property is and which trees you want kept and we will confirm and come prepared.
Can you clear my Pinehurst lot but save the pines?
Yes — that is the most common request we get here. We mulch the yaupon and understory and clear only the trees in the way of your build and drive, leaving the tall loblolly pines that make the property special. Mark or point out the trees you want kept and we will work around them.
How much of my wooded acreage should I clear for a home?
Usually just the build pad, the driveway, and a working area around them — not the whole lot. Over-clearing strips the pines that give the property its value and shade. We clear what the build actually needs and leave the rest, unless you want it opened up further.
How is brush removal different from forestry mulching?
Forestry mulching is one method of brush removal — it grinds the brush in place and leaves mulch behind. Brush removal more broadly can also mean cutting and hauling the material off when you want it gone entirely. We do both and recommend the one that fits your property, your budget, and what you plan to do with the land.
Can you clear brush without killing the trees I want to keep?
Yes. We clear the understory brush — yaupon, briars, and scrub — while leaving your mature trees standing. That is one of the most common requests we get: open up the land and clean out the junk growth, but keep the post oaks, pines, and shade trees that make the property worth having.
How do I keep the brush from coming right back?
East Texas brush is aggressive and will try to return from the roots, especially yaupon. Keeping it down means periodic mowing or re-mulching, and for areas where you want it gone for good, grubbing out the roots. We will walk you through a realistic maintenance plan based on what is growing on your land.

Need Brush Removal in Pinehurst?

Call now for a fast quote — we come to your property, walk the land with you, and quote it straight by the acre or the job.