buckeyefarmer
Epic Contributor
Depends on how much you thin. If real thick, you need to thin down. If too much is cut, then brush grows up.
Hmmm - buckeyefarmer - that's sure not the way it works in the pine forests around here. You thin and what remains grows big and strong. Otherwise, you end up with stands of spaghetti with green tops.
I wish I could get brush to grow here. I've got eighty acres of one thing or the other - either bunch grass or Ponderosa pine. I thin a stand and both the bunch grass and the remaining pines grow big and strong. I have absolutely no other type of tree on my acreage - just Ponderosa pine. That is the predominant tree in this entire area of NE WA.
We could use some idea of your budget.I'm taking delivery of a Kioti CK3510se TLB next week, along with a 55" Wicked Root Grapple, Piranha Bar, and a Wallenstein Chipper/Shredder. One of the projects on my to-do list is to thin out the forest surrounding my family's place. Total forest area of about 3-4 acres, maybe up to 6-7 depending on how industrious I get. Basically want to get rid of a lot of the young growth (2-3" trees), etc..., but not trying to clear everything. Trying to figure out the best way to go about it. No big rush... will work on this over the summer when I can. I also have a Stihl MS290 chainsaw, and an FS90 string trimmer.<snip>
Yep. Those "spaghetti" trees are already doomed; they have been out-competed by other trees, or by each other in some cases.
We could use some idea of your budget.
Your string trimmer with blade is the tool you need to get small stumps near ground level but I think your FS90 may be underpowered. I've a Stihl FS110 and and FS250 I can handle 2 inch trees easily with the FS250.
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Since you have a Stihl fs90 already, have you considered a pole saw attachment for it?{about $200.} I have one on my fs110, and it is probably one of my most frequently used tools. ...