Resurrecting this thread! We have a hilly rocky farm in places. We have many prickly pear trees on our 60 acres.
We have tried chopping with an axe, digging smaller ones out with a sturdy pitchfork, burning, piling and leaving to rot, clearing branches with a machete, allowing our Dexter cattle to partially clear the ground and mulching with our Woodland Mills mulcher. We, too do not like using chemicals where our cattle graze.
I has taken 5 years of trial and error. Suffice to say I don't need a gym membership. Will post typical pictures next.
We now:
a) pull out small pears with our Kawasaki Mule, or pitchfork and chop the root off. We pile the roots to rot or pile them to burn;
b) Strip the branches and pads off of larger trees using a breaking saw, pick up the branches and pads, gather them by truck or Mule, then mulch the pile;
c) pull out the leftover trunk of the tree and pull it up by the roots. We chop the roots off to burn and split the trunks to mulch them;
d) We run our Dexters over the paddock first to clear the ground, pick up fallen timber so as to gain access to remove the pear.
This is an iterative process. We have cleared 30 acres in 5 years with little to no regrowth.
We have tried chopping with an axe, digging smaller ones out with a sturdy pitchfork, burning, piling and leaving to rot, clearing branches with a machete, allowing our Dexter cattle to partially clear the ground and mulching with our Woodland Mills mulcher. We, too do not like using chemicals where our cattle graze.
I has taken 5 years of trial and error. Suffice to say I don't need a gym membership. Will post typical pictures next.
We now:
a) pull out small pears with our Kawasaki Mule, or pitchfork and chop the root off. We pile the roots to rot or pile them to burn;
b) Strip the branches and pads off of larger trees using a breaking saw, pick up the branches and pads, gather them by truck or Mule, then mulch the pile;
c) pull out the leftover trunk of the tree and pull it up by the roots. We chop the roots off to burn and split the trunks to mulch them;
d) We run our Dexters over the paddock first to clear the ground, pick up fallen timber so as to gain access to remove the pear.
This is an iterative process. We have cleared 30 acres in 5 years with little to no regrowth.