Smart sprinkler systems, drip irrigation, pump installs and drainage that protects your yard.

Blackland clay is the reason so many Hutto sprinkler systems run wrong. This soil swells tight when it's wet and cracks open when it dries, so a zone that looked perfectly even on installation day ends up with sunken trenches and dry ridges two summers later. We build and repair irrigation in Hutto around that movement instead of ignoring it, because a system that isn't set up for blackland clay is a system you'll be fighting every season.
Star Ranch and Emory Crossing are still filling in, which means fresh sod over compacted subgrade and builder-grade heads that were never really tuned for how tight this clay holds water. Hutto Highlands has more established beds, and we see the opposite issue there: root systems and settled soil that need drip lines and adjusted run times rather than a blanket sprinkler schedule. Either way, the water needs a path to actually reach the roots instead of sheeting off the surface toward the street.
We are a family-run crew, licensed and insured, working both houses and commercial lots along this stretch of Williamson County. Estimates are free, no pressure attached, and we typically get out to look at your yard within 48 hours of your call.
We walk your Hutto property and assess the site.
An itemized estimate with no surprises.
Tidy local crews and modern equipment.
Results made for Williamson County, plus optional upkeep.
We also provide irrigation in these nearby communities:
The fastest ways to cut your watering bill are a properly zoned sprinkler system, drip irrigation in beds, a smart controller with a rain sensor, and grouping plants by water need. Drip can use far less water than spray, and fixing leaks and overspray often pays for itself within a season.
Common signs of a sprinkler leak are a sudden jump in your water bill, soggy or eroding spots, unusually green patches, low pressure, or heads that weep when the system is off. Corral Bros runs a full system audit to find leaks, broken heads and dead zones, then quotes the repair.
Usually it's the clay, not the schedule. Blackland clay sheds water fast when it's cracked and then seals up once it's saturated, so heads can be overwatering one spot and starving another a few feet away. Corral Bros runs a system audit in Hutto yards to check head spacing, pressure and soil condition, then adjusts zones so water actually soaks in instead of running off.
It depends on lot size, how many zones you need and whether we're tying into an existing well or municipal supply. We do not quote blind over the phone. We come out, walk the property, and give you a straight number in a free on-site estimate, usually scheduled within 48 hours of your call.
Sod on new construction sits over compacted, disturbed clay that drains poorly the first year or two. We generally recommend getting a properly zoned system in early rather than hand-watering, since uneven watering on fresh sod is one of the fastest ways to lose it to either drought stress or root rot.
Yes, and for garden beds and foundation plantings it often works better than overhead spray. Drip lines deliver water slowly enough that clay can absorb it instead of pooling on top, which cuts down on runoff and the fungal issues that come with standing water against a house foundation.
Blackland clay drains slowly by nature, so heavy Hill Country downpours can leave standing water for a day or more if there's no path for it to go. Corral Bros installs French drains and grades problem areas so runoff moves toward the street or a dry well instead of sitting against your foundation or drowning your beds.
We do. Smart controllers with rain sensors are worth it here because Hutto can swing from a wet week to a hard, cracking dry spell fast, and a controller that adjusts run times automatically saves water and keeps the clay from either flooding or hardening up between waterings.
Free, no-pressure estimate from a local Williamson County crew. Call (737) 404-9343 or request a quote online.