Forestry Mulching & Land Clearing in Kamas, UT
Kamas calls itself the gateway to the Uintas, and the land work matches: ranch ground along the Weber River through Oakley and Francis, and cabin lots climbing into aspen and conifer along the Mirror Lake Highway. We bring forestry mulching, pasture clearing, and cabin defensible space to the Kamas Valley — about fifty-five minutes from our West Jordan shop.
Quick Answer
Kamas calls itself the gateway to the Uintas, and the land work matches: ranch ground along the Weber River through Oakley and Francis, and cabin lots climbing into aspen and conifer along the Mirror Lake Highway. We bring forestry mulching, pasture clearing, and cabin defensible space to the Kamas Valley — about fifty-five minutes from our West Jordan shop.
What makes this area different
The valley floor is working ground: hay fields, horse pasture, and fence lines that Russian olive, willow scrub, and volunteer brush keep trying to close. The mulcher reopens fence lines and field edges in place, with no burn pile waiting on a permit and no debris hauled off a ranch that has better uses for its trailer.
Up SR-150 toward Samak and the forest boundary, the lots turn to oak brush, aspen, and mixed conifer, and the job becomes fuel work: grinding understory around cabins, opening spacing, and clearing access lanes on properties that back up to national forest. The season is real up here — snowmelt to snowfall — so summer dates go first.
Local context
Kamas Valley trips get routed with our other Wasatch Back work, which keeps the drive from landing on your quote. The parcels out here are big enough to be efficient for the machine, and cabin jobs scope well from photos and a parcel map when the owner is not on site.
What we do in Kamas
- Fence line and field-edge clearing on Kamas Valley ranches
- Cabin-lot defensible space along the Mirror Lake Highway corridor
- Understory and ladder-fuel grinding on forest-boundary parcels
- Pasture reclamation around Oakley and Francis
- Homesite and access-lane clearing on acreage
- Russian olive removal along ditches and the Weber bottoms
Invasive species we see in Summit County
- Aspen and mixed conifer — cabin elevations toward the Uinta foothills
- Gambel oak and chokecherry — dry slopes around the valley edges
- Big sagebrush and rabbitbrush — benches and pasture margins
- Russian olive — ditch lines and river-bottom fence rows
- Cheatgrass — fine fuel on disturbed, dry ground
- · Mirror Lake Highway (SR-150)
- · Weber River valley
- · Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest boundary
- · Oakley rodeo grounds
Oakley · Francis · Marion · Samak · Peoa
Often covered on the same trip as Kamas jobs.
Special considerations for Kamas
Elevation runs the calendar in the Kamas Valley, and wet river-bottom ground stays soft late into spring — we schedule to the ground, not the other way around. On forest-boundary lots we confirm property lines before cutting; grinding brush on the wrong side of a national forest line is a mistake nobody gets to make twice.
Services we offer in Kamas
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Serving Salt Lake County, northern Utah County, Tooele County, and the greater Wasatch Front