
Storm debris from older roofs and fence lines
The Challenge
After that hard spring storm in Garland, we got a call from Park Groves where old roof shingles, wet tree limbs, and broken fence boards had blown into a narrow driveway. The morning air still carried that muddy, green smell from soaked leaves, and the pile sat right where folks needed to pull cars in and out. Homes in that part of town carry a 1950s-to-1980s footprint, so the debris often comes from mature trees, aging siding, and tired rooflines. That mess blocks access fast, and it turns a regular cleanup into a safety problem for the whole block.
The Result
We rolled in with the right box size, set it where the driveway could still breathe, and kept the drop close so the customer didn’t have to drag heavy debris far. I remember our crew sorting the sharp shingles from the loose limbs first because that keeps loading safer and cleaner. We loaded by hand, kept the work area swept, and hauled everything out before the next round of weather moved in. We do it that way because Park Groves homes don’t give you extra room, and our customer got their driveway back without the headache.
I called about the storm mess, and you got my driveway clear fast and kept everything simple.
Marisol G.
