Commercial · June 2026
Farm & Ag Property Cleanups on the 99 Corridor
Ag properties accumulate on a different scale: equipment sheds, labor-house turnovers, irrigation graveyards, and the corner of the yard where old projects go to lean. Our 99-corridor routes were practically built for it.
The common jobs
- Farmhouse estates — three-generation homes outside Shafter and Wasco, cleared with the same keepsakes-first care as town estate jobs.
- Shop & barn clear-outs — scrap-heavy, which works in your favor: recycled metal offsets the haul price.
- Worker-housing turnovers — documented, fast, and scheduled around season (see turnover service).
- Irrigation & fencing piles — pipe, drip line, T-posts, and wire, sorted for recycling on the spot.
What needs special handling
Ag chemicals, fuel drums, and treated-seed bags can't ride the truck — Kern County's disposal programs take them, and we'll flag and stage them during the walkthrough (the list). Everything else, from the dead swamp cooler on the bunkhouse to the orchard-edge dump pile, is fair game.
Route pricing up the corridor
Shafter, Wasco, Delano, and McFarland share standing weekly routes, so rural addresses pay town prices. Multi-day clears stage a $475 roll-off by the barn; photo quotes from the field work fine — text them to (661) 282-7085.
