Time to Brushhog a meadow

   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #11  
smaller pieces take longer per acre than big pieces.
in a 20 acre rectangular piece, you can fly along pretty fast (little wasted motion I suppose)
in a 1 acre piece, lots of turning, lots of crap to get in the way, etc.
That's why small acreage costs more per acre.

BTW, farmwithstuff, you must have some SMOOTH pastures, 5mph would knock me for a loop. 4.5 in the Utility is about as fast as I can go. (and not that fast in a compact)
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #12  
It takes me around an hour per acre to cut my lower field. My avatar is a picture of what I am cutting. Jay
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #13  
John_Mc said:
Does anyone have any "real-world" times to brushhog a meadow? I've been asked to help a neighbor with a wildlife habitat practice where he needs to brushhog a meadow once every 2 years.
My brain doesn't always work like those of "normal" people. When I saw the title I immediately thought you were referring to the best time to brush hog a wildlife habitat meadow. This may be a little off subject, but . . .

I've been involved with improving and creating wildlife habitat for many years. Throughout the upper part of the country east of the Mississippi, we generally recommend brushogging in early to mid-August for a multitude of reasons:
(1) By then, the baby critters are big enough to have moved out of the meadows and won't be left homeless, slaughtered, or as orphans.
(2) The grasses and other seed producing plants will have matured by then, so they will produce winter feed for the critters, and the annuals will reseed themselves.
(3) We brushhog high -- 8-10 inches for intermediate cover.
(4) The grasses will have time to grow back by early frost, and provide winter habitat.

P.S. A great site for info is: Wildlife ecology and management

and, one particularly good publication is (see page 10 - Mow after August 1):
http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/wildlife/publ/onedge.pdf
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow
  • Thread Starter
#14  
knute_m said:
I've been involved with improving and creating wildlife habitat for many years. Throughout the upper part of the country east of the Mississippi, we generally recommend brushogging in early to mid-August for a multitude of reasons:
(1) By then, the baby critters are big enough to have moved out of the meadows and won't be left homeless, slaughtered, or as orphans.
(2) The grasses and other seed producing plants will have matured by then, so they will produce winter feed for the critters, and the annuals will reseed themselves.
(3) We brushhog high -- 8-10 inches for intermediate cover.
(4) The grasses will have time to grow back by early frost, and provide winter habitat.

P.S. A great site for info is: Wildlife ecology and management

and, one particularly good publication is (see page 10 - Mow after August 1):
http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/wildlife/publ/onedge.pdf

Knute_M -

I was actually looking for the time it should take to do it, since most of the stuff I do on my own land, I just DO... I don't pay much attention to the time it takes...

But that is good info on the best time of year to mow for wildlife habitat purposes. I'm actually pretty heavily involved with a non-profit group here in Vermont (Vermont Coverts: Woodlands for Wildlife) that is dedicated to educating landowners about wildlife habitat and wildlife issues. We (as well as the VT Dept of Fish & Wildlife) generally recommend not mowing between April 15 and August 1 for just the reasons you cited. We have a fair amount of Ruffed Grouse around our neighborhood (and some woodcock) which need to be undisturbed during their nesting season. Since they nest on the ground, that means no mowing.

I've been mowing lower than you do on my own property... generally about 6". However, what I tend to do is not mow the whole thing at once. I'll leave islands, strips, or other pockets here and there, and go back and mow them a couple weeks later, after the first stuff I've mowed has had time to grow back in. I used to mow on a 3 year rotating schedule... 1/3 of my larger meadow each year. But when I enrolled in the USDA's WHIP program (Wildlife Habitat Improvement Program), my pasture was small enough that they didn't want the hassle of tracking whether I'd done such a small amount each year.

One thing I still do is split up how often I push back the "edge"... the area along the edges of the pasture that starts to grow saplings. This provides some good browse for the deer in the winter, so I don't cut it all in one year.

Thanks for the links... I'll check them out

John_Mc
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #15  
Most of the time I can mow about an acre per hour with a 5' mower.
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #16  
Good info... Both time to mow and the time of year to mow... Last night I cut a nice path around the field - about 12' wide - with my BX24 and a 4' hog...
First time mowing down this field - stuff was from 3-6' high - grasses, goldenrod, some saplings (small)... but the ground is quite smooth as it's an old hay field last worked 4 years ago... based on the sq ft cut last night - it's about 1 acre/hour for me...
I keep the FEL on and low to take out saplings first and alert me to "hidden" treasures in the tall grass.
Yes - watch the temp gauge in the tall stuff - I had to clean my screen when I was done... It fills up quickly!

The entire time I was mowing I felt bad because it's so early in the year up here in NY... I never touch a field like this until after July 21st... why then - I dunno - that's what we always did when I was growing up...
On the other hand - it's so darn much fun... It's gonna be hard to wait until late July... but since we think there are actually reproducing ring-necks here... I think I can do it!
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #17  
Fishpick,
Pace yourself. With it beeing so dry if you go at it too fast you wont have any bush hogging to do later :). The stuff I mowed about a month ago is no higher now than after I mowed. The lawn is dead except for where the down spouts drain. I only mowed the lawn once or twice this year. Believe it or not but my bird feedr, I mean pasture that I planted at the begining of June actually sprouted after the rain we had a week ago.

Have fun,
Eric
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #18  
Attached is a quick little spreadsheet based on the formula discussed. Its simple and down and dirty but I think it works. If anyone sees any mathmatical flaws, I can correct.
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #19  
pnowacki said:
Attached is a quick little spreadsheet based on the formula discussed. Its simple and down and dirty but I think it works. If anyone sees any mathmatical flaws, I can correct.

Mornin Pete,
Very neat ! :) Thanks. Using my figures Im obviously wasting time at the end of the fields because Im not mowing as fast acres/hr as the chart would indicate. But very neat just the same !
 
   / Time to Brushhog a meadow #20  
Eric_Phillips said:
Fishpick,
Pace yourself. With it beeing so dry if you go at it too fast you wont have any bush hogging to do later :). The stuff I mowed about a month ago is no higher now than after I mowed. The lawn is dead except for where the down spouts drain. I only mowed the lawn once or twice this year. Believe it or not but my bird feedr, I mean pasture that I planted at the begining of June actually sprouted after the rain we had a week ago.

Have fun,
Eric
HAH - 35 acres... 4' hog... I'm paced!

:)

Won't touch it again till late July then I'll go at it hard until the whole thing is done...
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2006 VOLVO VNL64T TANDEM AXLE SLEEPER TRUCK (A45679)
2006 VOLVO VNL64T...
2019 INTERNATIONAL 4300 26FT BOX TRUCK (A50046)
2019 INTERNATIONAL...
ASSET DESCRIPTIONS & CONDITION (A50505)
ASSET DESCRIPTIONS...
TEST YOUR BID BUTTON! (A50459)
TEST YOUR BID...
2020 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup Truck, VIN # 1GCRYDED7LZ290322 (A48836)
2020 Chevrolet...
2013 Chrysler Town and Country Touring Van (A48082)
2013 Chrysler Town...
 
Top