If a tree came down on your property earlier this year, there's a good chance the stump is still sitting there, and summer is exactly when that starts to matter. Reseeding, laying new sod, putting in a garden bed, or finishing a landscaping project all get put on hold until the stump and root flare are actually gone, not just cut down flush.
Grinding removes the stump below grade so grass can be reseeded directly over it, which is a very different result than a stump that's just been cut short and left to rot on its own over the next several years. It also eliminates the tripping hazard and the spot where new sprouts keep popping up from the old root system.
Late summer is a good window for this kind of cleanup, since grinding now leaves enough of the growing season left to get grass established before fall.
Do you have a stump sitting in your yard from a removal that's been putting a project on hold?
#UpstateSC #TreeCare
Before/after photo of a stump grinding job, showing the ground-level result and how the area looks ready for reseeding or landscaping. Authentic job photos preferred over stock imagery.
Canva text suggestion: "Ground Level, Ready To Reseed" or "The Last Step Before A Finished Yard"