M5farm
Well-known member
seen it done many times. as long as you get the debris cleared between rows it will work.
Your stumps must be differnt then ours. We still have oak and hickory stumps that are barly showing any decay 15 years fter being cut at the ground.pdfangus":1g22o0qu said:yeah but they rot out pretty quick and at no cost....
i have reverted to being a minimalist......the easiest money to earn is the money you do not spend....
making the new land part of an intensive rotational grazing scheme will bring it along even faster.
Kscattle":1pfg54k2 said:Pine trees are a soft wood, oak and hickory are hardwood trees.
The only thing we have around here even remotely like pines are cedars, they last forever.pdfangus":ibvrekq3 said:Kscattle":ibvrekq3 said:Pine trees are a soft wood, oak and hickory are hardwood trees.
he said up front that the trees were 40 year old pines....
pines go fairly quickly....
I have some pines down here, but I'm not pushing them over for nothing.dun":183jrztf said:The only thing we have around here even remotely like pines are cedars, they last forever.pdfangus":183jrztf said:Kscattle":183jrztf said:Pine trees are a soft wood, oak and hickory are hardwood trees.
he said up front that the trees were 40 year old pines....
pines go fairly quickly....
greybeard":1ir40l1b said:Once cleared, have a herbicide sprayer ready. When that sunlight hits it the first wet spring, every seed and rhizome in the soil is going to germinate like mad. Trust me on that.