Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help)

   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help) #1  

sidecarist

Silver Member
Joined
Jul 28, 2016
Messages
190
Location
East TN on the mountain
Tractor
Branson 4520R
I have about 3 acres of forested land that I need to clear to make a horse pasture for 2 horses that were "donated" to my wife and kids...

1. We know almost nothing about horses but are learning fast.
2. I need to expand the pasture area for them and do it fairly quickly. The small trees I can rip from the ground whole. its the larger stumps I need help with. Can I just cut them flush with the ground and let them rot, or do I need to dig/grind them all up? Its a lot of work maybe 60+ stumps 6" or bigger with more than half of them being in the 6-8" range.

I'd really like to cut them flush and leave them but am concerned about them causing problems for the horses. I will be planting forage grasses for them and will disc the ground, lime, fertilize, etc to get the pasture established.

Thoughts and advice are greatly appreciated!

Thanks.
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help) #2  
I'm in the same boat. 2 horses, and looking to make some pasture.

I think for the Horse's sake the stumps need to be dealt with, you can't just leave them flush. rotting stump = hole=broken horse leg

I'me trying to decide if I'm buying a 3pt stump grinder to grind them to 6" below grade OR hire/rent an excavator to dig them all out.
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help) #3  
My advice is rent a trackhoe in the 8-12000 lbs range, remove your stumps, disk or otherwise till the soil and plant a pasture mix on it and lightly disk or otherwise run a drag over the seeded soil.

Sounds simple doesn't it?

Contact your local ag extension office or soil conservation office of some sorts to ask what to plant, I woudl imagine TN growing season is longer than where I am in Southern IL so you might still have time to get it done this year. However you won't have a good pasture to put them on till at least this time next year. I planted Timothy, Ladino Clover and Orchard Grass last week after removing a bunch of russian olive and scrub brush with a trackhoe and prepping the soil as described above.
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help)
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Budget is an issue for me at this time... Renting large equipment is out of the question. I'd like to avoid renting a stump grinder is possible. I have pallets of fertilizer, and can get lime done by a neighbor. The real question is should I leave the stumps 3' high, or cut them flush. If flush cut will that cause problems for the horses? I realize that i may need to dig them out as they rot and I'm ok with that. Option two is bight the bullet and rent a grinder and do what I can with limited funds. I'm already not too happy about having horses yet. We simply aren't ready for them and the expenses they bring. But here they are and now I have to deal with it the best I can....

Thanks,
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help) #6  
After small stumps soften some, you should be able to work small stumps out with a Subsoiler.

I recently bought a Subsoiler from everytfhingattachments.com. I intend to assemble it and give it a try cutting roots in the next two weeks.

VIDEO: subsoiler stumps - YouTube

In my experience dull-tooth rental stump grinders are slow.
 
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   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help)
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Yes, I have a subsoiler, and a backhoe that will work after the stumps have had a year or two to rot. In 5 years I should be able to have them all out. It's the immediate question of flush cut stumps being a problem for the horses in therror near term.

Maybe I should post under a different topic.
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help) #8  
A LOT depends on the variety of tree as to whether it will rot.
We have a variety of locust that the stump just will not rot.

I cut one (8" dia at ground level) flush with the ground,, in 1982.
To promote rot, I plunged the tip of the chainsaw into the stump at least 4 inches,,, at least 6 times.
The plunges are at different angles, and intersect.

Well, any other stump would have rotted, the locust is as strong today,, 34 years later, as the day I cut it,,,

I did one acre, in the middle of the woods as a game feeding plot.
It had big (20"+) trees standing. A 953 CAT cleared and graded the area in two hours.

Get an excavator,,, :thumbsup:
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help) #9  
Another way to look at it is either spend the money feeding a horse in hay or spend some money to invest in the pasture so you have to feed less hay.

In the midst of the same issue as you I have weighed options on my farm of where to build a pasture for a horse and have opted to take 3 acres out of row crop production to contruct fences and pasture because I can grow a good pasture there and will end up buying less hay. The other option for me was very mediocre ground that wouldn't grow good pasture and I woudl en up buying alot more hay.

Of course I have a loan agreement worked out with a good friend of mine on heavy equipment but I would say the work I did with a trackhoe would have been $1500 maybe to hire it out or $500 to rent a machine for two days and have at it. For 6'8" stumps a large tracked bobcat and toothed bucket would do the job too, but not as good as an excavator in the 4-6 ton range.

So in essence... spend now to have a great pasture and feed hay heavily for a year then less after that, or have a mediocre pasture and feed hay alot more.
 
   / Clearing for a Horse Pasture (help)
  • Thread Starter
#10  
No locust, Poplar, Oak and Maple.

Wish I could afford the Excavator. I'd have a long list of things to do in 1-2 days and I'm sure it could be done, but for now I have 2 horses eating the excavator budget in feed!
 
 
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