







A lot of properties in central Wisconsin have the same problem - brush and scrub growth that just keeps taking over. What starts as a few overgrown patches turns into a tangled mess of branches, saplings, and debris that makes whole sections of your land basically unusable. That's exactly what we were dealing with on this Kronenwetter property.
Here's what we were working with: dense brush piled up along the tree line, fallen limbs, and thick undergrowth choking out the wooded areas near the water. The kind of stuff that doesn't respond to a chainsaw and a weekend of work. It needed real equipment and a smarter approach.
That's where forestry mulching comes in. We ran our mulching head attachment on the skid steer through the overgrown areas - grinding down brush, saplings, and debris right on the spot. No hauling loads off-site, no burning, no tearing up the ground with heavy excavation equipment. The material gets processed and left behind as a natural ground cover. It's a clean method that actually protects the soil underneath.
What you end up with is open, walkable ground between the trees - neat, manageable, and way more usable than before. The wooded sections look completely different. The area near the water opened up nicely too, giving the property a much better feel overall. That's the thing about forestry mulching - it doesn't just clean up a mess, it genuinely changes how you can use your land.
If you've got brush-choked areas on your property that you've been putting off dealing with, forestry mulching is worth a serious look. It's efficient, it's effective, and it doesn't leave your property looking like a construction zone when it's done.