Storm debris from older roofs and yard piles cleared fast
After a hard spring storm pushed through Creekside Village, we got a call from a homeowner with broken shingles, soaked cardboard, and limbs stacked along the driveway. The air still smelled like wet cedar, and the narrow drive made it tough to stage anything without blocking the garage. Homes from that 1950s-to-1980s buildout tend to shed a mix of roofing scraps, fence boards, and old junk all at once, so the pile grew faster than they expected. We knew if we didn’t get it out quickly, the mess would keep tracking into the house and yard.
We rolled in with the right-size dumpster, set it where the truck could reach cleanly, and kept the placement tight so the crew could keep loading without dragging debris across the lawn. I remember we used the bed edge and wheelbarrow to move the heavier storm waste first, then stacked the lighter stuff on top to make the most of the space. That kind of sorting matters in Creekside Village because older homes throw off mixed debris, and a clean driveway at the end made the whole property feel usable again.
You got the storm mess out before it turned into a bigger problem, and that saved us a lot of stress.
Javier Rodriguez

