trackdrone
New member
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2022
- Messages
- 10
- Tractor
- Kioti NS5310H
Hi everyone, long time lurker, recently signed up. I'm hoping for a little advice as to whether or not something is doable, because I haven't really been able to google the specifics of what I'm trying to achieve.
Overview: I have 100 acres in East Texas, an older timber property that was thinned and "cleaned up" about 4 years ago. Soil is very sandy loam, think sugar sand that ends up blowing lots of dust in this drought.
Several large "pasture areas" were created where all of the trees were removed, but stumps left, and has been heavily grown in weeds, that is, outside of dodging stumps, fairly easy to mow with the brush hog. There is about 4 acres of this that I want to seed with native grasses and wildflowers in the coming spring, with the goal of overtime controlling the undesirable weeds through mowing and creating native meadow.
In addition, there is about 6 acres of fairly open woods (mostly pine, some hardwoods) that has been overgrown with sweet gum and other brush in the past few years, that I'm having mulched and opened up this week, due to the number of stumps and the size of the brush growth just being too difficult to do in any short period of time with the brush hog. I'd like to seed this area the same as the meadows, since it will have little shade with the typical distance between pines of about 20-40'. The mulcher will grind the stumps down in this area to about 1" below the ground.
Now, everywhere I read says I need to disc the soil when planting these, and then work to get the seed buried .25-.5". However, this has three issues for me - 1 is budget -- the discer just isn't in it for the next year, 2 are the stumps and other hidden stuff in the ground that I just don't want to deal with, and 3 is time: I have much less of it available than I'd like at any given moment.
My question is - can I just brush hog and then spread the seed out in the spring across these 10 acres of weeded field and fairly open woods, and get a decent growth rate without having to prep all of the soil first? I'm not looking to create a manicured field, or create pasture for livestock, but instead to encourage healthy growth of desirable native meadow through initial seeding and regular brush hogging.
FWIW, the equipment I have available to me ATM is a Kioti NS5310H tractor, a 6' medium duty brush hog, and a 6' medium duty box blade. I intend to buy a spreader for seeding/fire ant control, and a tow-behind sprayer for roundup, but due to several other projects needing to be done, I'd like to not invest in any other implements if I don't really have to.
Thanks in advance!
Overview: I have 100 acres in East Texas, an older timber property that was thinned and "cleaned up" about 4 years ago. Soil is very sandy loam, think sugar sand that ends up blowing lots of dust in this drought.
Several large "pasture areas" were created where all of the trees were removed, but stumps left, and has been heavily grown in weeds, that is, outside of dodging stumps, fairly easy to mow with the brush hog. There is about 4 acres of this that I want to seed with native grasses and wildflowers in the coming spring, with the goal of overtime controlling the undesirable weeds through mowing and creating native meadow.
In addition, there is about 6 acres of fairly open woods (mostly pine, some hardwoods) that has been overgrown with sweet gum and other brush in the past few years, that I'm having mulched and opened up this week, due to the number of stumps and the size of the brush growth just being too difficult to do in any short period of time with the brush hog. I'd like to seed this area the same as the meadows, since it will have little shade with the typical distance between pines of about 20-40'. The mulcher will grind the stumps down in this area to about 1" below the ground.
Now, everywhere I read says I need to disc the soil when planting these, and then work to get the seed buried .25-.5". However, this has three issues for me - 1 is budget -- the discer just isn't in it for the next year, 2 are the stumps and other hidden stuff in the ground that I just don't want to deal with, and 3 is time: I have much less of it available than I'd like at any given moment.
My question is - can I just brush hog and then spread the seed out in the spring across these 10 acres of weeded field and fairly open woods, and get a decent growth rate without having to prep all of the soil first? I'm not looking to create a manicured field, or create pasture for livestock, but instead to encourage healthy growth of desirable native meadow through initial seeding and regular brush hogging.
FWIW, the equipment I have available to me ATM is a Kioti NS5310H tractor, a 6' medium duty brush hog, and a 6' medium duty box blade. I intend to buy a spreader for seeding/fire ant control, and a tow-behind sprayer for roundup, but due to several other projects needing to be done, I'd like to not invest in any other implements if I don't really have to.
Thanks in advance!