buckeyefarmer
Epic Contributor
When you dont mow, and let it grow up, weeds take over and it looks like crap.
When you dont mow, and let it grow up, weeds take over and it looks like crap.
In fields that are close-cropped by stock, that of course allows large weeds to thrive. Agree that is ugly. Mowing is bad for native grasses. You cut off the heads so it can't seed, and it's the flowers and seed heads that look pretty. Unmowed native grasses will grow tall and outcompete most weeds. Like this:
View attachment 561018
View attachment 561019
Around here unmowed grass areas usually grow trees. If you are not mowing at least every other year you will have a lot of trees.
Subscribe to the Buckeye Farmer premise, unmowed fields look ragity. Please define native grasses? My fields are hayed, (mostly timothy, some clover and alfalfa) so they are mowed twice for collection and if necessary, a third for appearance.(cut and chopped for silage). If mowing damages the plant, why do my hayfields rebound so well? Argument is illogical.
We all have opinions, See no one in this area letting fields of substantial acreage lay dorment. Occasionly a farmer will skip a season as part of crop rotation management, then plant winter wheat in early September.
Deere Do lay in thie tall grass, but that grass also is generally infested w/ horse and deere flies. Biologists have determined wildlife prefer the sborter grass for grazing, closer to the sugar core of the plant. Can count 30-40 deere in my cut hay fields on any given evening, haven't received a single complaint.
Again, we all have an opinion, yet speculation is NOT synonymous w/ fact.
EDIT: Shorter grass exposes field mice population, supports birds of prey and fox and other carnivores.
I guess you need a real ZTR with the right tires. I take my ZTR on slopes there is no way I would have my tractor on and it doesn't slide down. I hear this comment all the time and I get tired of the ignorance. A ZTR has a wider stance, lower CG, and is much more maneuverable - all characteristics that help you hold a slope - of course there are differences between ZTRs in these characteristics.