Tunkhannock sits at the confluence of Tunkhannock Creek and the Susquehanna River in the heart of the Endless Mountains, a landscape shaped by a mix of agriculture, natural gas development, and rural municipal land. Wyoming County parcels affected by Marcellus Shale activity — including access roads, pad perimeters, and associated right-of-way corridors — often carry reclamation obligations that require more than surface seeding. Our forestry mowing and site-prep services bring overgrown or heavily disturbed ground to a workable condition, and our habitat restoration work establishes native plant communities that satisfy reclamation standards and hold up over time without continuous intervention.
Creekside and riparian corridors along Tunkhannock Creek and its tributaries are under sustained pressure from Japanese knotweed, multiflora rose, and other invasive species that thrive on the disturbed soils common in agricultural and post-industrial settings. These infestations compromise bank stability, reduce native biodiversity, and create management burdens for municipal and commercial landowners with frontage along these waterways. We provide multi-season invasive control programs paired with native buffer plantings that stabilize banks, improve habitat function, and bring riparian margins into a maintainable condition.
Municipal and commercial parcels throughout Wyoming County that have been left fallow or underutilized often require forestry mowing to clear accumulated brush and shrubby invasive cover before any restoration or development work can begin. Our equipment and crews are staged for northeastern Pennsylvania operations, keeping mobilization timelines realistic for Wyoming County projects regardless of how remote the site. From a brushy municipal lot in Tunkhannock Borough to a larger rural parcel requiring phased mowing and native seeding, we coordinate permitting, site preparation, and planting to deliver a durable, inspectable outcome.