Thorny Locust tree

   / Thorny Locust tree #21  
Mark,

I have been following this subject with interest because I don't know what a locust thorn is like. Dang, your photo sure brought the stories to life. You all with locust trees need to be looking at dozers and armor!/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif That is one mean looking thorn.

MarkV
 
   / Thorny Locust tree #22  
Yep, Armor.... that's what I need. Those thorns are in bunches up and down the trunk and all over the limbs. I have been stuck pretty good several times. I am real careful dropping them with a chainsaw.
Mark
 
   / Thorny Locust tree #23  
MarkV, that photo was of one of the side thorns not the main long one... Just for reffence.
 
   / Thorny Locust tree #24  
Gentlemen,

My parents have a property in Australia and as they have got a bit older, they have leased the place out to a neighbor to run his cattle on for grazing and for baling hay and making silage. On the tilled areas the land has remained in good condition but in those areas left for grazing alone, there onle Honey locust has run rampant. We have had a problem with them for years but now they have really spread. When I head home to OZ, most of my holiday time is spent dealing with these bloody things and I have had a bit of experience dispatching them back to the **** they came from.
1. Use proper safety equipment, wear long sleaves, good thick leather gloves and absolutely wear eye protection. Have some anti-inflamatory / topical anaesthetic cream on hand too. You will know why when you need to use it.
2. Try and get them before the fruit (black pods) have set. That is how these things propagate, and birds and cattle love them and will deposit the seeds all across the paddock as they are not digested. So before you fell the tree, make the effort to pick up as many that may already be on the ground, bag them and properly burn them.
3. Leave the tractor in the shed unless you have highly pucture resistant tires. My weapon of choice is something with tracks and a blade but a D9 would be a bit over the top. (many of our trees are mature).
4. If you have to pull it over, make sure your chain is long. You absolutely do not want these mongrels coming through your tractor cab.
5. poison the stumps with glyphosate or some other broad spectrum herbicide if you are going to leave them there, otherwise rip them out of the ground.
6. be careful of those around you once chopping the felled tree as those thorns can go flying some distance if grabbed by the chain of your saw.
7. Get into it, but be aware that these thorns actually hurn more than they look and the do look ferocious. The swelling and pain is immense from even just a small injury.
8. For the small stuff, poision the foliage, come back a couple of weeks later and rip them out.
9. Make sure your neighbors do the same thing. Those seeds from the black pods spread easily via birds and cattle, they are relatively fast growing so you need to do the job thoroughly and over a broad area.

Hope it helps. Be careful. These are a bloody awful species that can really get out of control and they just become exponentially harder to remove over time.

Bill
 
   / Thorny Locust tree #26  
Don't have much to add other than to agree that these trees are very nasty. They can be pushed over with a tractor FEL leaving the root ball exposed. Then go back and push on the root ball until the entire thing is tatally uprooted. However, the roots are very deep and stubborn, probably the most aggravating tree I have ever tried to totally uproot. A word of caution, be prepared to say words that will later make you ashamed you said them.
 
   / Thorny Locust tree #27  
we have some of the honey locusts. Wife calls them the bit** tree. deer love eating the pods. Didn't know they were so hardy and strong. Will probably cut some for firewood cuz she wants them gone. yippee seat time
:D:D
 
   / Thorny Locust tree #28  
We have a fair amount of them :( Safest way to get them out is with a bulldozer, no flat tires ;-) Actually I had a contractor clear one pasture last summer while he had his dozer here for other work. Pushed them into a big pile that I'll eventually burn.

I don't think honeylocust (BIG thorns) is as good as black locust (little thorns) as far as fence posts go.

Ken
 
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   / Thorny Locust tree #29  
I can see how people used the thorns as nails. Here is a pic of one I pulled out of my tire. Lucky it was the little thorn on the side and not the long part that stuck in my tire.
Mark

As Crocodile Dundee would say. "That's not a thorn, this is a thorn."

Sorry, I couldn't resist.:D
 

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   / Thorny Locust tree #30  
Black locust is one of the most valuable trees IMO. Great fire wood and great building lumber, last for a very long time. Black locust will easily out last any treated timber bought at the box stores{lowes home depot etc..}
 

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