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Weekly Lawn Mowing on a Danvers, MA property

Danvers properties tend to be larger than the Salem side and want consistent weekly service through a long growing season.

Weekly Lawn Mowing in Danvers, MA.

Owner-operated mowing across the North Shore. A predictable weekly rhythm, the same person showing up each visit, and the full package every time — mow, trim, edge, blow. Weather and unexpected conditions can shift a day; we communicate when that happens.

Town
Danvers, MA
Season
April through late October

Overview

Weekly lawn mowing on the North Shore of Massachusetts keeps grass at a consistent 2.5–3.5 inch height through the growing season (typically April through late October). Casey and Sons Landscaping mows, line-trims, edges, and blows off hard surfaces on a regular weekly or bi-weekly cadence — the owner shows up, not a rotating crew. Weather and unforeseen conditions occasionally shift a visit by a day or two; you'll always know when. Service covers Peabody, Salem, Danvers, Beverly, Lynnfield, and Swampscott. Pricing is flat per visit, quoted after a free on-site estimate.

What's included for Danvers properties

  • Mow at an agronomically correct height for New England cool-season grass
  • Line-trim around beds, trees, fences, and structures
  • Edge driveways, walkways, and bed lines
  • Blow clippings and debris off all hard surfaces
  • Alternate mowing patterns week to week to avoid ruts
  • Same owner on every visit — you'll recognize the truck

Lawn Mowing in Danvers

How lawn mowing works on a Danvers property

Mowing in Danvers means more turf per visit. Hathorne and Putnamville's half-acre and three-quarter-acre lots take real time — we run a wider-deck mower where access allows and walk-behind on the tighter Tapleyville lots. Properties along the Danvers Rail Trail corridor pick up more debris from the path margin, so the blow-down step takes longer. Same weekly cadence across the town, just longer per-visit billable time on the bigger lots; weather occasionally shifts a day but the rhythm holds.

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

  • How often should I have my lawn mowed in Massachusetts?

    For most North Shore lawns, weekly mowing from early May through mid-October is the sweet spot. Bi-weekly works for slower-growing properties or during dry July stretches, but anything longer than two weeks risks scalping the grass and stressing the root system. We'll recommend a cadence during your estimate based on the actual turf.

  • Do you lock in the price for the full season?

    Yes. Your per-visit rate is set at the estimate and doesn't change mid-season unless you ask for added scope (extra property acquired, new bedwork, etc.). No fuel surcharges, no seasonal creep.

  • What happens if it rains on my scheduled day?

    We push to the next available dry day — usually within 24–48 hours. You won't be skipped for the week. If conditions force a true skip, that week is credited.

  • Do you bag or mulch the clippings?

    Mulching by default — it returns nitrogen to the lawn and there's nothing to haul away. On overgrown first cuts or wet spring grass, we bag. Bagging on a standing request is available for an added fee.

  • 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.

Call or text · (781) 715-4254

Owner · Ben Casey