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Fall Cleanup on a Hamilton, MA property

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.

Call or text · (781) 715-4254

Owner · Ben Casey