I'm just north of San Antonio.
The ol hill country... Im from the area too. Everyone I know poisons them, or cuts and poisons the stump then they die/rot out enough to burn.
Theres no machine that will work in many of the areas.
I'm just north of San Antonio.
Donovan is right on the money! Herbicides are your friend. You may have to get a restricted use applicator card but that's pretty easy, at least it is here. Paul
How many is a few hundred?So we have a few hundred acres that a number of years ago we cleared of all the cedar groves. Now that all that is done we have second growth coming up that I am attempting to clear. The little cedar saplings can range from less than pencil thick to a couple inches though most are about as thick as a pinky finger. To actually kill them its necessary for it to be cut flush to the ground preferably but just so long as all of the green gets taken off it will be good enough. Some out in the open are larger and solitary and less of my concern at this point. Im trying to eradicate the thousands of saplings growing up under the shady oak trees.
I have been manually clipping these with some old loppers and though it does a great job it wreaks absolute havoc on my knees and back bending over to get a flush cut to the ground that wont serve as a caltrop to the cattle. Im am looking for a better method of doing this, time to mechanize.
Chainsaws do good work but it would still require bending over. I have though about getting small saw and trying to put a 30" bar on it to lessen the bending but I have no idea if thats feasible. They say long bars are for huge powerful saws but Im not clearing forests of 30" trees, just little small crap that should be cut in less than one good "BurrRRRRRrrrr" so Im not sure if the power concerns apply to this situation as it really only needs to move the chain, not rip it though the heart of a redwood.
I have looked for a gas pole saw that would be less than 5' long and they dont appear to exist. An 8' pole would be far too unwieldy.
I have heard about the little saw blades that you can attach to a weedeater but this is very rocky territory and getting a 6" blade in the crevasse seems like a great way to ruin it in short order.The brush clearing weedeaters looked like they would handle the abuse of a few hundred acres better but the first one (stihl fs 360 c-e) I looked at came up just shy of 1k bucks so thats prohibitive in addition to the not being able to get it in between rocks.
Anyone have any good ideas or experiences?
How many is a few hundred?
I think a man with hand tools could do a acre a day if he works hard .
Good land clearing equipment should do 3 acres a hour .
Fire can do hundreds acre a hour . The problem with fire it don't burn the big stuff . Herbicide will kill but you still will have the big .
Only one way to clear I know of do it by hand or use equipment ? Larry
We have Several that clear land . The best tool I have seen is a rolerchopper They are a large roller with blades the roller is filled water not only do they flatten it the blades chop ever thing up . Normal price is $ 80.00 to $100.00 a hour the big ones 6" tree is no problem . When we burn we have to chop after . LarryThe front pasture that Im clearing the second growth off now is right around 250 I think. In some spots I could clear a few acres an hour, but in some others, such as this past weekend it takes two days to clear out under 2 big oak trees only. Thats what really broke my back and brought me to crowd source some ideas.
I think I will try and find a saw blade that will attach to the ryobi weedeater as a test run along with the actual ryobi pole saw extension without the extension installed. If the saw blade is effective enough Ill find one that fits our old john deer gas stuff and hit it hard. If it cuts good but is under powered Ill look into one of the big ones
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Go down to Home Depo with a axe & hire some guy from south of the boarder to run it.Donovan is right on the money! Herbicides are your friend. You may have to get a restricted use applicator card but that's pretty easy, at least it is here. Paul