Large-Tract Land Clearing Near Fort Smith, AR
Forestry mulching, pasture reclamation, and site prep for large acreage, farms, and commercial ground south and east of Fort Smith. One call connects you with an operator running full-size mulching equipment.
Our land clearing Services in Fort Smith, AR
Large-Acreage Forestry Mulching
Large-acreage forestry mulching near Fort Smith, AR. Day rates, test-acre pricing, and full-size tracked mulchers for 20 to 80+ acre tracts.
$1,000-$2,000 per acre
Learn more →Pasture Reclamation
Pasture reclamation near Fort Smith, AR. Take cattle ground back from cedar and hedge on 20 to 80+ acre tracts and get it grazing again on schedule.
$1,000-$2,000 per acre
Learn more →Cedar & Hedge Removal
Eastern red cedar and osage orange hedge removal near Fort Smith, AR. Fence rows, whole-field cedar takeover, and thorn-proof cleanup at acreage scale.
$1,200-$2,500 per acre
Learn more →Commercial Site Clearing
Commercial site clearing near Fort Smith, AR. Development tracts, corridor work, and pre-construction vegetation removal with bid-ready scopes and pricing.
$2,000-$5,000 per acre
Learn more →Right-of-Way & Easement Clearing
Right-of-way and easement clearing near Fort Smith, AR. Powerline, pipeline, and access easements cleared and maintained, priced per mile or per acre.
$3,000-$8,000 per mile
Learn more →Trail & Access Road Cutting
Trail and access road cutting near Fort Smith, AR. Hunting land trail systems, ranch lanes, and interior access on large tracts in the River Valley.
$2-$5 per linear foot
Learn more →Built for the big jobs
Plenty of outfits around Fort Smith will clear a lot. This site exists for the other kind of job: the 40 acres of pasture disappearing under cedar, the hunting lease with no way to the back half, the development tract that needs a bid-ready clearing number, the mile of hedge row that has swallowed its fence. Large-acreage work south and east of Fort Smith, across southern Sebastian County, Franklin County, and Logan County, is a different trade with different machines, and it deserves a front door of its own.
The country down here explains the work. Follow Highway 71 south through Greenwood to Mansfield, Highway 22 east through Charleston, or Highway 10 out to Booneville under Sugar Loaf and Magazine Mountain, and you pass through cattle and hay country stitched with timber, with eastern red cedar and hedge apple pressing in on every field that misses a few years of attention. The tracts run big, the growth runs fast, and the honest fix runs on full-size tracked mulchers working 1 to 4 acres a day for days or weeks at a stretch.
The work this site covers
Six services, all scaled for acreage:
- Large-acreage forestry mulching, the backbone service, with day rates, test acres, and production-rate pricing on 20 to 80+ acre tracts.
- Pasture reclamation, taking cattle ground back from cedar on a mulch, clip, seed, and regraze timeline.
- Cedar and hedge removal, the species-specific fight against the two trees eating this region’s grass.
- Commercial site clearing, scoped and documented for development tracts and corridor projects.
- Right-of-way and easement clearing, linear work priced by the mile for powerline, pipeline, and access corridors.
- Trail and access road cutting, hunting land systems and ranch lanes priced by the foot.
Because everything is mulched in place, nothing sits in burn piles waiting on an Arkansas Department of Agriculture burn window, and nothing leaves the property on a truck. The ground comes out covered, protected, and ready for its next use.
What happens when you call
Be clear about what this site is: a referral service operated by AbhiShri LLC. We do not own machines and we do not clear land. What we do is solve the problem every large-tract owner in this region knows, which is finding an operator with genuinely big equipment who answers the phone and will commit to a multi-day job an hour from town.
When you call or send the form, we take down the tract location, the acreage, what is growing, and what the land needs to become. Then we connect you with an independent licensed local operator equipped for large-tract work who covers your county. That operator walks the ground with you, quotes the job under their own business, per acre, per day, per mile, or per foot as the work dictates, and performs it on their own equipment and schedule. Your contract is with them, and the referral costs you nothing.
On a big commitment, expect and welcome the test acre: one representative acre mulched at a set price so both sides know the real pace and the real finish before the full tract is signed.
Ground we cover
The core territory runs south and east of Fort Smith: Greenwood, Hackett, Huntington, Bonanza, and Mansfield in Sebastian County; Charleston, Ozark, and Cecil in Franklin County; and Booneville and the Sugar Loaf country in Logan County, with the edges of Scott County in reach for the right job. If your tract is in that country and measured in tens of acres, you are who this site was built for.
The cedar is not waiting. Pull your parcel up on the county assessor’s map, make the call, and get a walk-through on the schedule.
Areas We Serve
We serve the entire Fort Smith metro and River Valley: Fort Smith, Greenwood, Huntington, Mansfield, Hackett, Bonanza, Charleston, Booneville, Ozark, Cecil.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does it cost to clear large acreage near Fort Smith?
On multi-acre tracts the per-acre rate drops as the job grows. Light to moderate brush on 20 acres of Sebastian County pasture might run $1,000 to $2,000 per acre mulched, while thick cedar and hardwood regrowth on steep Logan County ground runs higher. Day-rate pricing is common on big jobs. A walk-through is free and produces a firm number for the whole tract.
How many acres can a mulching crew cover in a day?
A full-size tracked mulcher typically covers 1 to 4 acres per day depending on stem size and density. Light brush and saplings go fast; a field of 8-inch cedars goes slow. On a big reclamation job the operator will usually knock out a test acre first so both sides know the real pace before committing to the full tract.
Is forestry mulching better than dozer clearing for pasture?
For reclaiming grazing land, usually yes. A dozer roots out everything including topsoil, leaves burn piles, and invites erosion on the slopes around Greenwood and Booneville. Mulching grinds growth flush with the ground, leaves roots holding the soil, and puts a mulch layer down that feeds grass recovery. Dozer work still wins when you need stumps fully out for dirt work or a building pad.
Can you handle commercial clearing jobs, like development tracts or utility easements?
Yes. Commercial site clearing along the Highway 71 and Highway 22 corridors, easement and right-of-way maintenance, and pre-construction clearing for pads and access roads are core work for the operators we refer. Bid documents and per-acre or per-mile pricing structures are standard on this kind of job.
Who actually does the work when I call?
FortSmithLandClearingPros.com is a referral service operated by AbhiShri LLC. When you call or send the form, we connect you with an independent local land clearing operator equipped for large-tract work. They quote the job, run the equipment, and stand behind the work under their own business.
My land is in the Sugar Loaf or Poteau Mountain foothills. Can machines work that slope?
Tracked mulchers handle most of the grades in southern Sebastian and northern Scott County, and experienced operators know where the limit is. Genuinely steep faces get worked along the contour or flagged as hand-crew territory. Describe the terrain honestly on the form and the operator will tell you on the walk-through what is machine ground and what is not.
Do I need to burn or haul anything after mulching?
No. That is the main reason large-tract owners pick mulching. Everything ground stays on site as a mulch layer, so there are no burn piles waiting on an Arkansas Department of Agriculture burn window and no truckloads leaving the property. The finished ground can be driven, mowed, or seeded.
How do I get a serious quote on a big tract without wasting a trip?
Send the parcel location or a pin from the county assessor map, the total acreage, what is growing (brush, cedar, mixed hardwood), and what you want the finished land to do (graze cattle, hunt, build, sell). With that, the operator shows up to the walk-through already knowing what machine the job takes, and the number you get is real.