Rubbish and green waste removal in Turramurra
When Turramurra's liquidambars turn, we clear our calendars.
Hedge country. Federation blocks behind deep clipped photinia, family gardens that produce in every season, and an autumn that buries kerbs. We're the crew that keeps up with it.
What Turramurra blocks ask of us
- The hedge reduction, properly finished. Those street-front photinias and murrayas are the suburb's signature, and their yearly cut leaves a pile the green bin will still be chewing through at Christmas. We take the lot the week it's cut, so the hedge line looks intentional rather than abandoned.
- The leaf-fall load. A mature liquidambar drops more than any one garden can absorb. Raked, bagged or loose, we load it and the lawn gets its light back before the moss moves in.
- The family-garden overhaul. Turramurra is a family suburb with three-generation gardens: trampoline out, veggie beds rebuilt, cubby retired. The mixed load, half green waste, half everything else, is our bread and butter.
- Station-side units too. A third of Turramurra homes are units these days, and the end-of-lease or downsizing clearout near the village is a job we do gladly, lift bookings and all. Our Gordon page covers the strata routine in detail.
The first cold snap after Anzac Day starts it. Six weeks later every gutter in Turramurra runs russet, and our truck barely leaves the postcode.
Worth knowing, north or south side
Turramurra spreads a long way from its station, up to North Turramurra's near-all-house streets by the national park edge, and down the southern slopes toward the Lane Cove valley. Blocks get steeper as they fall away from the ridge, which mostly matters for where the truck stands and how far we barrow. It never changes the price you were quoted: the figure you hear on the walk-around is the figure, slope included.
Same run, either direction: Wahroonga above, Pymble below, and the whole ridge between.