Boone County property lines and tree rows from above
— Lot & line clearing

Take the edge back

Fencerows the honeysuckle stole, property lines gone feral, the corner where the shed's supposed to go — cleared clean without wrecking what stays.

Get a Free Estimate Call (317) 406-4920

What counts as line clearing?

Selective is the whole skill

Anyone with a machine can flatten a line. The job is keeping the keepers — working around the mature hardwoods, dropping the junk growth threaded between them, and leaving an edge that looks intended rather than bulldozed. We mark keeps with you before a saw starts, and the estimate lists what goes and what stays by name. For bigger acreage-scale reclaims — multiple-acre mulching, pasture restoration, building-site prep — our sister crew at Iron Root Land Clearing runs the forestry-mulching equipment that work deserves; we'll tell you honestly which side of that line your project falls on.

Selective cutting that keeps the trees worth keeping
The skill isn't cutting — it's choosing.

The property-line etiquette layer

Indiana's common-law rule is simple enough — you may trim what overhangs your side, up to the line, without killing the tree — but the neighborly version works better: a conversation first, a shared estimate second. A surprising number of line-clearing jobs end up split between neighbors once both see the number, and the fence sits better afterward too. We're happy to walk the line with both parties and quote it whole, split, or side-by-side.

What it costs

Fence and lot lines get quoted by the job after a walk-through, not by the foot off a chart — density decides everything. A light 100-foot honeysuckle reclaim is a half-day; a hedgerow full of grown-in trunks with wire buried in the wood is real surgical work. The estimate is free, written, and separates must-do from nice-to-do so you can phase it.

Get a Free Estimate Call (317) 406-4920

Call Eagle Creek — (317) 406-4920