New home sites, overgrown lots, and fence lines along the Easley–Greenville line — cleared and ready to use.
Powdersville sits in the fast-growing northeast corner of Anderson County, right where Easley runs into Greenville along the SC-153 and US-123 corridor. New subdivisions, shops, and home sites are going in across the area, and most of that land has to be opened up first. Embark handles that with land clearing and forestry mulching — wooded lots, grown-over pasture, and building sites cleared in one pass, with the brush ground into mulch instead of burned or hauled off.
Building lots and new-construction parcels around Powdersville and Wren opened up to the footprint you need, ready for the next trade on site.
Fields gone to scrub, and grown-over fence lines and property lines cut back so you can see and use your land again.
Thinning the understory to open a yard or a sightline while leaving the mature hardwoods you want to keep.
The land around Powdersville is rolling Piedmont — red clay that turns slick and soft after rain, with creeks and draws feeding toward the Saluda River and Three and Twenty Creek. That terrain is where tracked mulching earns its keep: the machines ride low and spread their weight, so they hold side slopes and wet bottoms that bog down a wheeled skid steer, and they do it without carving ruts across a lot you’re about to build on.
Mulching also fits how the area is growing. The material stays on site as a mulch layer that feeds the soil and slows regrowth, so there’s no smoke drifting across a neighbor’s new build and no burn permit to chase. When a job needs more than clearing — a driveway base, a building pad, drainage shaped — our grading crew takes it from there.
No two parcels price the same, so we estimate after seeing the ground in person. The rates page explains how we charge, and the cost guide gives per-acre figures to plan around.
Call or text and we’ll set up a free walk-through and give you an honest estimate on the work.
Call (864) 625-1025