
Hamilton's large rural-residential lots and equestrian properties make it a classic North Shore landscape town.
Fall Cleanup in Hamilton, MA.
Full leaf removal, a final short mow, bed cutback, and winter prep — one visit for most yards, two for anything under mature oaks. Every pile gets hauled off-site.
- Town
- Hamilton, MA
- Season
- Mid-October through late November
Overview
Fall cleanup on the North Shore of Massachusetts runs from mid-October through late November. Casey and Sons removes every fallen leaf from lawn and beds, cuts back spent perennials, gives the lawn a final short cut to prevent winter matting, edges beds one last time, and hauls all debris off-site. Heavily wooded properties typically need two visits (early and late). Pricing is flat per visit, quoted up front.
What's included for Hamilton properties
- Complete leaf removal — lawn, beds, driveway, walkways
- Final mow at a shorter-than-summer height to prevent snow mold
- Cut back spent perennials and annuals
- Clean out and re-edge beds for winter
- Haul all debris off-site (never blown to a neighbor's lot)
- Split into two visits on heavily wooded properties
Local context
Landscaping in Hamilton — what makes it different
Hamilton is one of the most distinctive towns on the North Shore — working farms, equestrian properties, and large rural-residential lots along Bay Road and Asbury Street. The Myopia Hunt Club anchors the town's character. Landscape work here runs from standard residential weekly mowing to larger-property seasonal projects. Heavy tree canopy across most of the town makes two-visit fall cleanups the default.
Neighborhoods we work in
- Hamilton Center
- South Hamilton
- North Hamilton
Local landmarks
- Hamilton Center
- Myopia Hunt Club
- Patton Park
- Bradley Palmer State Park
Questions
Frequently asked
When is the best time for fall cleanup in MA?
The deepest-value visit is late-October to mid-November, after the main leaf drop but before the first significant snow. Properties with lots of oaks often need an early-November sweep and a late-November final, since oaks drop last.
Why not just blow the leaves into the woods?
Because it kills the woods. Dumping leaf piles into town tree lines smothers native understory, changes soil pH, and is a code violation in several North Shore towns. We haul every pile off-site to a proper composting facility.
Do you do one visit or two?
Depends on the property. A mostly open yard is one visit. A wooded lot or a house under mature oaks is usually two — otherwise you pay for a cleanup and still have six inches of leaves on the ground by Thanksgiving.
Can you handle the larger Hamilton properties?
Yes. Large rural-residential lots with mature canopy are standard Hamilton work. Equipment and time factor into the per-visit rate.
Begin
A yard that stays on schedule.
Free on-site estimate. Typically same-day response. Every inquiry handled personally.
