








Some landscapes just get away from you. Weeds take over, plants grow into each other, and what used to be a nice yard starts looking like it belongs to nobody. That's exactly what we were dealing with here - multiple beds completely choked out by overgrowth, with no real structure holding anything together.
We started from scratch. Every bed was cleared out - all the overgrowth, all the weeds, all of it. Once the slate was clean, we laid fresh landscape fabric throughout to give this property a real fighting chance against future weed pressure. That fabric is doing a lot of work underneath the surface that you won't see, but you'll definitely feel it when you're not pulling weeds every other weekend.
From there, we brought in 15 yards of premium cedar mulch and spread it across the beds. Cedar is one of our go-to materials - it looks sharp, holds moisture well, and has natural properties that help deter insects. We also installed new bullet paver edging around the beds to give everything a clean, defined border. That edging makes a bigger difference than most people expect. It's the line between a yard that looks intentional and one that just looks like it happened.
New plants went in throughout the landscape to round everything out. We placed them with spacing and long-term growth in mind - not just what looks full on day one. The goal is always a yard that looks better two or three years from now, not one that's already overgrown again by next summer. That's the difference between just doing the work and actually thinking through the design.
What we ended up with is a property that went from completely unmanageable to clean, low-maintenance, and sharp looking. This is the kind of work we genuinely enjoy - property cleanups and full landscaping builds that give a home's exterior the attention it deserves.