You had a tree taken down. Now there’s a stump in your yard. What do you do with it?
Most people ask for “stump removal” without knowing there are actually two different processes — and that the right one depends on what you’re planning to do with the space. Here’s how they differ and how Louisiana’s soil and climate affect the choice.
Stump Grinding: What It Is and When It’s Right
Stump grinding uses a machine with a rotating cutting wheel to shred the stump down to ground level or a few inches below. The result is wood chips and a depression in the ground where the stump was.
What stump grinding does NOT do: it doesn’t remove the roots. The root system stays in the ground and decays naturally over time — in Louisiana’s warm, wet climate, typically 5-10 years depending on tree species.
Grinding is the right choice when you want the stump gone from sight, you’re planting grass over the area, you’re working with a tighter budget, and there’s no construction or hardscaping planned nearby. In Washington Parish’s clay-heavy soils, stumps and roots decay faster than in drier climates because the soil stays moist — this actually works in your favor when grinding is the right call.
Full Stump Removal: What It Is and When It’s Right
Full stump removal means the stump and root ball are excavated and physically removed. It’s more disruptive and more expensive than grinding — and it’s the correct choice in specific situations.
You’re building on or paving over the area. Roots left underground decay and create voids. Under a driveway, patio, slab, or foundation, those voids become structural problems.
You’re installing a septic system or drainage. Underground roots can interfere with drain field performance.
The tree is Chinese tallow or another aggressive re-sprouter. Chinese tallow — one of the most invasive trees in Southeast Louisiana — will resprout aggressively from cut roots left in the ground. Full removal is the only reliable solution.
You’re installing a pool. Pool excavation can’t have root masses in the way.
How to Decide
Answer two questions. First: is anything going in the ground or on top of this area in the next few years — a slab, driveway, pool, septic system, patio? If yes, full removal. Second: is this Chinese tallow, Chinaberry, or another tree known for aggressive root regrowth? If yes, full removal or chemical stump treatment.
If the answer to both is no — grinding is probably right and more cost-effective.
Jack’s Tree Service does stump grinding and stump removal throughout Franklinton and Washington Parish. Call us at (985) 515-8939 or reach out through jackstreela.com for a free estimate. We’ll tell you which approach makes sense for your specific situation.