ADin
Silver Member
Well, today I took the day off and started a new round thinning of about half of my 1 acres of woods nearest to the house. The main goal when done is for this section to still be fairly thick, but thin enough to make mowing tolerable and allow just enough light in for shade grass to grow. I could just mow it before with my JD335 garden tractor the my new JD2305 with ROPS and larger deck is now too tight in many spots. My secondary goal is to remove as many of my hawthorn trees as possible.
I have dropped an unbelieveable number of trees todays, mostly 1" to 5" diameters, and it still looks like I have barely made a dent. More than half of the trees are these nasty multi-trunk'd hawthorns. They are absolutely terrible. They are either rotted or hard as rock maple with nothing in between. The limbs twist and turned and grab onto anything near them. In the process of cutting I'm also creating a shower of limb/thorn fragments blanketing the ground which I know will be puncturing my tractor tires for the next year.
I rented a Vemeer 6" industrial chipper and it's still a bear to get them down its throat and I risk ripping myself up as I drag them over to chip. The 12" chipper is what I need but is too big and heavy for where I need to position it. And to think I was even considering buying a chipper/shredder - what I joke. Tackling these hawthorns with anything smaller than the Vemeer and I suspect it would be faster to cut them and let them decay where they lie.
If anybody else has dealt with and has any shortcuts on cutting and chipping hawthorns I would love to hear. I have two more days left and I still believe I will get it all done, but it now looks like my liesurely jog has turned into a marathon.
I have dropped an unbelieveable number of trees todays, mostly 1" to 5" diameters, and it still looks like I have barely made a dent. More than half of the trees are these nasty multi-trunk'd hawthorns. They are absolutely terrible. They are either rotted or hard as rock maple with nothing in between. The limbs twist and turned and grab onto anything near them. In the process of cutting I'm also creating a shower of limb/thorn fragments blanketing the ground which I know will be puncturing my tractor tires for the next year.
I rented a Vemeer 6" industrial chipper and it's still a bear to get them down its throat and I risk ripping myself up as I drag them over to chip. The 12" chipper is what I need but is too big and heavy for where I need to position it. And to think I was even considering buying a chipper/shredder - what I joke. Tackling these hawthorns with anything smaller than the Vemeer and I suspect it would be faster to cut them and let them decay where they lie.
If anybody else has dealt with and has any shortcuts on cutting and chipping hawthorns I would love to hear. I have two more days left and I still believe I will get it all done, but it now looks like my liesurely jog has turned into a marathon.