Project Overview
A Kerrville landowner had one of the better hilltops in the area with a wall of cedar hiding it. The plan was to open up roughly a 180-degree view from the top while leaving the natural character of the land intact.
Scope of Work
- Mulched cedar across the hilltop and surrounding slope
- Opened a roughly 180-degree view from the top
- Worked selectively to keep the property's natural character
- Freed up water and sunlight for native grasses
Terrain & Site Conditions
Hilltop setting with sloped sides and rocky Hill Country conditions. Grade and footing dictated how the equipment moved across the work area.
Challenges & Considerations
Working a sloped hilltop with surface rock means picking lines carefully — the mulcher has to stay stable and you don't push into ground that wants to slide. We took the cedar out in passes that worked with the slope instead of against it.
Result
The hilltop is open, the view runs roughly 180 degrees across the country, native grass has light and water again, and the property still looks like it belongs to the Hill Country.
Let's take a look at your land
Serving Kerrville, Kerr County, and the Texas Hill Country with land clearing, forestry mulching, cedar removal, and brush work.



