Storm debris cleared before it baked in the heat
The morning after a heavy storm rolled through Carriage, we found limbs, shingles, and soaked yard waste stacked along a driveway and pressing against the curb. The air already felt thick, and in Hollywood’s heat that kind of debris starts smelling fast and getting heavier by the hour. Javier remembered what Wilma did to neighborhoods like this, so we kept the route tight and the bin placement careful. When a block sits in that post-war 1950s-1980s housing mix, tight driveways and parked cars make cleanup messy fast, and delays only add to the headache.
We set the dumpster where it fit without blocking the garage, laid down boards to protect the drive, and started loading the wet debris by hand so the pile didn’t spread. Our crew kept the load balanced and sorted the heavier storm wood first, then the loose branches and old fence pieces. We do this because soggy storm waste gets slippery quick, and a clean pickup keeps the whole street moving. By the end, the driveway opened back up and the homeowner didn’t have to stare at that pile another day.
I was relieved when your crew got that storm mess out of my driveway so fast.
Megan R.

