Clearing old hay field

   / Clearing old hay field
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Is anyone aware of replacement blades for brush hog that will cut grass/weeds better?


1) You need enough power from your tractor so your Rotary Cutter does not bog down in the thickest grass you will mow. That will be a 48" width Rotary Cutter on undulating ground powered by 29-horsepower.

2) Sharpen the blades you have with an angle grinder.

3) At 3-mph:

A 48" mower will cut around 1.3 acres per hour.
A 60" mower will cut around 1.6 acres per hour.
A 72" mower will cut around 2.0 acres per hour.

MORE:



I'd like to cut area twice a year to hopefully restore it's beauty. basically, an extended overgrown lawn.

You will need to cut the pasture at least four times per year.
Thank you for the information. What would be the $600 yearly repair?
I have a 5' brush hog.
 
   / Clearing old hay field
  • Thread Starter
#12  
A sharp bush hog will do an excellent job, leaving a tall lawn-like finish.
Sharp blades and the right speed are the key.
Assuming I would sharpen like a lawn mower angle?
 
   / Clearing old hay field
  • Thread Starter
#13  
As for the why; my assumption, mobilizing, probably to cut, Ted, rake, bail, load out; my guess is there is little profit in the hay for someone not within a mile or two.

Let's say, 3 4x5s per acres; 18x3=54 bails, ×$40=$2160; but we haven't moved any equipment, wear and tear, moved bails, ect. It's probably just not worth the time. Let's say you have no break downs, no weather issues, ect; you max profit is only like $1500 for 3 days of work, that's not giving any cost other than fuel. If we figure even $35/hr on the tractor, and $15/hr on the bailer; we are probably down to maybe $1000, and we still haven't moved the bails;

If there was a guy next door who needed the hay, and had the equipment, sure, but moving stuff in from 10 miles; probably just not worth it
Thanks, makes sense, although someone is on the our road cutting other fields, very similar in shape etc. I know one guy who only hays for show horses, and he told me it'd be a lot of work to get it to the high quality hay he is known for.
 
   / Clearing old hay field
  • Thread Starter
#14  
Thanks all, to reiterate, I'm not looking to extend my lawn for more weekly cutting. I'm looking to keep it low maintenance but looking good. I'll give the blades a good sharpening, wait for a dry spell (lots of rain again this year) and give it a go. I may just do a couple acres that abut my property to see where I'm at, all things considered...

Even though my neighbor told me he has contacted everyone he knows to hay, I will look around myself. He is not very assertive/social. It may end up being too much trouble to get things back to hay status, but it doesn't hurt to try.
 
   / Clearing old hay field #15  
In Georgia good 4 foot rounds are $80-90. That is from limed, fertilized and weed controlled fields. Or at least limed and fertilized. Just mowing with the brush cutter will be a good start to see if there is any cheap hope.
 
   / Clearing old hay field #16  
Thanks all, to reiterate, I'm not looking to extend my lawn for more weekly cutting. I'm looking to keep it low maintenance but looking good. I'll give the blades a good sharpening, wait for a dry spell (lots of rain again this year) and give it a go. I may just do a couple acres that abut my property to see where I'm at, all things considered...

Even though my neighbor told me he has contacted everyone he knows to hay, I will look around myself. He is not very assertive/social. It may end up being too much trouble to get things back to hay status, but it doesn't hurt to try.

I bet 1x/month will whip it back into shape. Weeds peter-out after being repeatedly cut, but grasses don’t. Just make sure to cut weeds now, before they get seeds. Might be a bit late for that, but I don’t know what you have there for weed types.
 
   / Clearing old hay field
  • Thread Starter
#17  
I bet 1x/month will whip it back into shape. Weeds peter-out after being repeatedly cut, but grasses don’t. Just make sure to cut weeds now, before they get seeds. Might be a bit late for that, but I don’t know what you have there for weed
Thanks, I'll give it a go. We are having another rainy summer, so maybe that would counteract the cooler than normal temps as of late. Now to go sharpen the blades...
 
   / Clearing old hay field #18  
In the longer term, you might want to take a look at how much of the 18 acres needs mowed, how much might be better in native grasses/veg, and how much might be better in something like planted pines or something. The reason I mention this, 18 acres to mow, even every two months, your looking at basically an entire weekend if mowing, every two months. Hired out mowing, I'm guessing $800-1000/cut? If you looked at it, and decided, we'll, that 4 acres I want cut every month, these 6 acres are going to be native veg, and these 8 acres are going to go either pines or natural forest reg, we start turning a two day job into a couple afternoons.
 
   / Clearing old hay field #19  
18 flat easy acres would be about $1,000 from me. If it’s got a lot of trees, steep, swamps etc, it would be more.
I just bumped my mowing rates substantially.
Now $250 for the first hour and $200 for each additional hour, but I tend to bid by the job and not by the hour.
 
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   / Clearing old hay field #20  
I strongly disagree with sharpening your blades. A bush hog/rotary cutter, is not a lawn mower. The blades are thick for a reason, they are designed to destroy the brush, not make it look pretty. Once it's been cut a few times, you can sharpen them if you like for a nicer look, but not until you have it under control.

Sharpening them will cause them to wear out faster. The initial edge will wear out very, VERY quickly on tall, overgrown weeds!!! Odds are very good, that you will probably need to replace the blades before you get things under control, make them last as long as possible. Blades are easy to change if you have a big impact wrench, and horrible to do if you don't.

Ideally, you need to mow three times a year to get the weeds under control and allow the grass to take over. Two times a year would be the minimum. After two years, you should see significant improvement just from mowing.

After the first time, it will be significantly faster and easier after that. Consider the first mowing as the big task. Get it over with, and it will never be that bad again if you maintain it.

As for getting somebody to hay it for you, it would be my guess that they do not want to go through the time and effort to get it back into quality grass without any guarantee that they will be able to get hay from it in the future. Once you get it into decent shape, odds are a lot better that somebody might become interested in haying it for you.

Since 18 acres is a massive amount of land to mow, start out with an area that you can easily mow three times a year. Lets say it's five acres. Focus on that area the first year, and then the next year, add a few more acres to it when the five acres become easy to maintain.

I started out with a 6 foot cutter that I wasn't able to keep up with on my place. I focused on areas that we spent time on, like around the pond, and are walking trails, but other areas would get out of control since I only got to them every other year. Now I have a bigger tractor and a 12 foot batwing cutter, and I'm able to mow everything three times a year. The transformation has been amazing!!!!

Congratulations on the land!!!
 

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