What Ingram looks like from the grinder seat.
Ingram runs along the Guadalupe River with hills climbing away on both sides. Lower elevations are pecan and cypress country; higher ground turns to oak-and-cedar mix over shallow caliche.
The species we grind here.
Big river-bottom pecans and cypress dominate the low ground. Above the river, it's live oak, post oak, and cedar on rocky ridges. Occasional cottonwood and hackberry as well.
The work we do here most.
Cypress and pecan stumps near the river, cedar clusters on the hillsides, long fence-line grinds on ranch property along Highway 39, and a lot of residential single-stump work in the older parts of town.
Reasons Ingram homeowners grind stumps.
- Recover riverside yard space after storms take down mature trees.
- Clean up fence lines on ranch property.
- Prep for landscaping or new construction on hilltop lots.
Local specialists, not generalists.
We know how to work carefully around cypress roots and river-bottom soil.
Track machines for muddy river ground, walk-behinds for tight lots.
Ingram is 10 minutes from our Kerrville shop.
How a Ingram job runs.
- 1Free on-site estimateWe come look at every job in person — no online guesses.
- 2ScheduleMost grinds happen within a week or two.
- 3GrindRight machine for the size, species, and access.
- 4CleanupChips mounded neatly, grass raked, hardscape swept.
- 5Walk-throughWe check the finished job with you before we leave.
Questions from Ingram customers.
Do you work on Highway 39 ranch properties?
Yes — regularly. Long driveways and pasture stumps are routine work for us.
Can you handle big cypress stumps?
Yes. Cypress is fibrous and grinds well; we bring the machine to match the diameter.


