
Danvers properties tend to be larger than the Salem side and want consistent weekly service through a long growing season.
Brush & Shrub Removal in Danvers, MA.
Dead shrubs, volunteer trees, invasive bittersweet and knotweed, overgrown beds. We cut it back, pull what we can, and haul every bit off-site.
- Town
- Danvers, MA
Overview
Brush and shrub removal is the first step in almost every yard transformation on the North Shore. Casey and Sons cuts down dead or unwanted shrubs, pulls stumps where the plant is small enough, clears invasive brush (bittersweet, buckthorn, Japanese knotweed), and hauls every bit off-site. The ground is left rakeable so re-planting or sod can happen right away.
What's included for Danvers properties
- Cut down and remove unwanted shrubs and small trees
- Pull small stumps; coordinate stump grinding where needed
- Clear invasive brush (bittersweet, buckthorn, etc.)
- Leave the ground clean and ready for re-planting
- Full haul-off — no brush pile left behind
Brush & Shrub Removal in Danvers
How brush & shrub removal works on a Danvers property
Brush and shrub removal in Danvers often runs to multi-day work — Hathorne and Putnamville properties carry overgrown wood-line edges where decades of brush has filled in. We cut, drag, chip on-site where space allows, and haul. Larger root-pull work near patios and walls is common. Tapleyville and Danvers Center are usually single-day removals on smaller plantings. Everything off the property unless you want chip kept for trail mulch.
Local context
Landscaping in Danvers — what makes it different
Danvers runs bigger than its neighbors. Half-acre, three-quarter-acre, and occasional full-acre residential lots are the norm in Hathorne, Putnamville, and along Route 35 up near the Topsfield line. Tapleyville has more compact turn-of-the-century housing stock with tighter lots. Danvers Center and the areas near Endicott Park sit between those extremes. The town's mature oak canopy — especially around Hathorne and the Danvers Rail Trail corridor — means fall cleanup almost always runs two visits to catch the late oak drop. Weekly mowing from May through October is where most properties land.
Neighborhoods we work in
- Danvers Center
- Hathorne
- Putnamville
- Tapleyville
- Danversport
Local landmarks
- Danvers Center
- Endicott Park
- Danvers Rail Trail
- Hathorne
- Putnamville
Questions
Frequently asked
Do you handle invasive species like bittersweet and knotweed?
Yes, with the important caveat that both bittersweet and Japanese knotweed regrow from the tiniest root fragment. A one-time cut-down isn't enough — we'll lay out the multi-season plan it actually takes to get rid of them.
Can you do stump grinding?
Small stumps we pull. For large stumps, we coordinate with a local stump grinder and fold the cost into the job — you get one invoice.
Do you service all of Danvers?
Yes — Danvers Center, Hathorne, Putnamville, Tapleyville, Danversport. Larger lots up in Hathorne and Putnamville versus tighter lots in Tapleyville just means different mowing times and different bed volume per job.
Why do Danvers properties often need two fall cleanup visits?
Oak canopy. Red and black oaks drop late — sometimes not until Thanksgiving — so a single early-November cleanup misses half the leaves. Most Danvers properties under mature oaks do best with an early November visit and a late November or early December final.
Begin
A yard that stays on schedule.
Free on-site estimate. Typically same-day response. Every inquiry handled personally.
