






This one had a lot going on. The front beds were packed with weeds - over 20 of them pulled out by hand - and a couple of the shrubs had just outgrown their space. When a shrub gets too big, it stops looking intentional and starts looking neglected. So we pulled the oversized ones out, cleared the debris, and gave the remaining plants room to actually breathe.
Out back, the approach was a little different. A few plants were worth keeping - just not where they were. We transplanted select plants to better spots, then swapped out the rocks for mulch. Rocks can look fine when they're first put in, but over time they shift, weeds push through, and the whole thing starts to feel like a chore to maintain. Fresh mulch is cleaner, easier to manage, and it actually does something useful - it holds moisture and keeps weeds from taking over as fast.
Once the heavy lifting was done, we went through both areas and hauled off all the garden debris. No piles left at the curb, no clippings scattered around. Everything cleared out. That part matters more than people think - a cleanup that leaves a mess behind isn't really a cleanup.
What you end up with is beds that look organized and intentional again. The hydrangeas and alliums that were always there get to be the focal point now, instead of competing with overgrowth. Fresh mulch laid across both the front and back ties it all together and gives the property a clean, finished look from the street.
This is the kind of work that makes a real difference in how a home looks and feels from the outside. Whether it's weeds that got out of hand, shrubs that outgrew their spot, or beds that just need a reset - we handle all of it, start to finish.
