Locust Trees are Nasty

   / Locust Trees are Nasty #1  

Believer

Silver Member
Joined
Aug 17, 2008
Messages
164
Clearing the pasture of locust trees. I have a loader mounted tree shear which makes cutting them down easy. I have a 42 hp Brush Bandit chipper which grinds them up. But getting those devils into the chipper is hard work, and slow. Maybe chipping isn't worth it, but I was doing that to avoid large piles laying around. What do other folks do with trash trees cleared out of pastures? I can't burn safely, I'm afraid of starting the county on fire. After I get through the locust, I've got about 50 acres of 3-10 ft cedars to clear; those are much easier to feed into the chipper.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #2  
If there are any sizable pieces, that is some of the best firewood there is. BTU per cord is one of the best and very little ash. I love the stuff!
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #3  
Clearing the pasture of locust trees. I have a loader mounted tree shear which makes cutting them down easy. I have a 42 hp Brush Bandit chipper which grinds them up. But getting those devils into the chipper is hard work, and slow. Maybe chipping isn't worth it, but I was doing that to avoid large piles laying around. What do other folks do with trash trees cleared out of pastures? I can't burn safely, I'm afraid of starting the county on fire. After I get through the locust, I've got about 50 acres of 3-10 ft cedars to clear; those are much easier to feed into the chipper.



When i started re-clearing my land (it had been bull dozed about 10 years before, but then ignored afterwards) I was very wary of burning. But I developed my own little system of burning which, while quite slow and labor intensive, disposed of hundreds and hundreds of cedars/saplings/whatever leaving little trace of their existance.

I would cut and and haul all of the cedars and pile them in one pile, and everything else in another pile, and I would burn (always in the same spot) between the two piles. the cedars, with just 2 or 3 weeks of drying, would go up like torches, and I would use them to "layer" the other other stuff which generally did not burn as well.

I would feed the fire manually, pulling from both piles as necessary, and so I could control how big the fire got. Sometimes I would allow the fire to burn down, and then re-arange unburned trunks and stumps, and then pile on more fuel.

I always had a few buckets of water around, but by keeping the fire small, by always burning on the same spot (so there was no ground cover to burn), and by burning on a Saturday when I would be spending the night, and not departing and leaving the ashes unattended, I never had any problems.

I should add that the biggest trees I was dealing with were about 4 or 5 inches diameter; by far the most numerous were the Ozarks cedars (which i am told are not really cedars, but that's what everyone calls them- I burned hundreds and hundreds of them over 3 years)




EDITED TO ADD: The main thing is to watch the wind- you don't want to be burning on a windy day. At least where I was, morning was always less windy than afternoon.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #4  
What you are talking about is Eastern Red Cedar which is actually a Juniper. true cedars have flattened needles, like you smashed them with a hammer.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #5  
One other option is to hire someone with a mulching head on a skid steer or a forestry tractor.

I am looking at maybe "pushing" a road 1000 feet into the woods and had been considering hiring a dozer to do it, but after seeing what some of these big mulchers can do I am now leaning that way. Dozers leave big piles, and i don't want big piles to deal with.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #6  
One other option is to hire someone with a mulching head on a skid steer or a forestry tractor.

I am looking at maybe "pushing" a road 1000 feet into the woods and had been considering hiring a dozer to do it, but after seeing what some of these big mulchers can do I am now leaning that way. Dozers leave big piles, and i don't want big piles to deal with.

Yeah, those machines are awesome. I do wonder how much it ends up costing to clear tree-infested old fields or to grind back vegetation trying to take over the edges of my fields.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #8  
Locust trees make rot resistant fence posts. If you really have locust trees, it would be a waste to knock them down instead of using them.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #9  
I call those Eastern Red Cedars we have here in the Ozarks. "gasoline trees".. Because that is how they burn, like they are soaked in gasoline. Even a green one burns rapidly, and a dry one is phenomenal, how it goes up in flame.
 
   / Locust Trees are Nasty #10  
I call those Eastern Red Cedars we have here in the Ozarks. "gasoline trees".. Because that is how they burn, like they are soaked in gasoline. Even a green one burns rapidly, and a dry one is phenomenal, how it goes up in flame.


Oh, yea. They burn. Only for a minute or so, but what a show.

By layering-in some cedars, I could even get green saplings & such to burn, when they would not have burned on their own.

Trying to figure out an easy way to "de-bark" some small cedars in order to make walking sticks. A few decades ago i knew someone in Branson who made cedar "Ozark Walking Sticks" for sale at stores around town. Would like to make me a couple.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2014 GMC Sierra 1500 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup Truck (A50323)
2014 GMC Sierra...
2015 Kubota L2501D (A50120)
2015 Kubota L2501D...
2022 NORSTAR IRON BULL 36FT GOOSENECK TRAILER (A52141)
2022 NORSTAR IRON...
JLG Skytrak 6042 6,000LB 4x4 Rough Terrain Telehandler (A50322)
JLG Skytrak 6042...
John Deere Gator XUV835M 4X4 Utility Cart (A48082)
John Deere Gator...
2013 Chevrolet Caprice Sedan (A50324)
2013 Chevrolet...
 
Top