Farm Today barn
 Top  Five  Ag  Exports  in  PA
Milk and other dairy products

Poultry and eggs

Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod

Cattle and calves

Hogs and pigs

 

 Financial  Services  
 

 Recent  Trends  in  Agriculture  
 

 Agricultural  Directory  
 

 Mailing  List  Archives
 

farm land for sale

feeding operations

backgrounding facility planning

strawberries how to raise

fruit trees

olin sims

crape myrtle

leyland cyprus

plum pox disease

wheat diseases in pennsylvania

fairfax strawberries

dwarf citrus trees

flowering bradford pear

planting strawberries

tomato blossom drop

drying gourds

sonic bloom

feeder steer prices

how to prune a jasmine vine

drying goards

bioaerosols and livestock odor

dwarf oleander

cocoa hull mulch

crab farming

john deere

plum trees

avian flu

lime fertilizer

feeding lots

farming practices

gleening crops

pictures of sheep

mad cow disease

crape myrtle winter

peach leaf curl

spittle bugs

strawberries in Idaho

chigger elimination

locating livestock facilities

dwarf milo

chicken manure

search your own discussions

lonicera kamchatika

leyland cypress

chronic wasting disease

msds and shrimp shell

amyrillis bulbs

leyland cyprus spittle bugs

christmas cactus

iowa pork industry

lefse plant

plant genetics

pictures of hens

greenhouse gardening

tomatoes in az

asian stink bug

 

 Search  Categories  
Animals
Environmental
Field Crops
Forestry
Genetics
Horticulture
Pests and Diseases
Practices and Systems
Software
Soils
Sustainability
Insurance

 

From: Paula and Sumner Roberts (graze-l_at_witt.ac.nz)
Date: 07/01/06


> From: Cynthia <caillagh@mwt.net>
> Reply-To: <graze-l@witt.ac.nz>
> Date: Thu, 29 Jun 2006 08:08:28 -0500
> To: graze-l@witt.ac.nz
> Subject: [Graze-l] [SPAM] - slope management tools - Found word(s) farm in 
the
> Text body
> 
> I sent the following message to a landscape contracting forum hoping for
> some help and then realized that -although I have never seen any posts
> on this list that really addresses my question- someone here might have
> some very good suggestions.  I would appreciate any help anyone is
> willing to offer.
> 
> Cynthia
> 
>> I could use some considered opinions from you folks that deal with the
>> land all the time. I'm not a landscape business but managing a
>> rotationally grazed farm makes me a grass farmer and the tools and
>> time are very much the same.
>> 
>> The problem I'm having is trying to find a good general tool for
>> grassland management on our severely sloping hills. Our sheep are
>> moved through 2 acre paddocks every couple days and I need to go in
>> and cut the paddock to an even 3-4" for regrowth and weed 
control. In
>> areas that are more even and gentle we can use our tractor and a PTO
>> brushcutter, but most of our property is 15-20 degree slopes with some
>> deeply uneven areas and is simply too much for our tractor to safely
>> manage. For the past year I have used a Stihl FS200 with blades to
>> cleanup 2 acres of these slopes at a time but this gets very old AND
>> our local mechanic managed to destroy the FS200 (another story). I am
>> now without my most used tool and need to decide what to get to
>> replace it. Maybe a blessing in disguise as this was a fairly painful
>> way to manage the sloped paddocks.
>> 
>> I've used a DR brushcutter as well as a BCS sicklebar mower and the
>> BCS brushcutter in the past at another farm I managed. They are heavy
>> and as exhausted as I am after a day with the FS200, I am much more so
>> with these heavy machines. Worse, the very nature of them makes them
>> especially touchy on those steep slopes as neither the DR or either
>> BCS don't so much "turn" as do a multi-phase three-point 
tug-and-lug.
>> They both look good in review and are fine on flat terrain, but using
>> them are quite a different thing on these slopes. I had the
>> opportunity to try one of the stand-on mowers but on steep slopes I
>> never felt safe.
>> 
>> I had a landscaper tell me that one of the better walk-behind mowers
>> would probably work well for me and I'm wondering if you would agree
>> and what you all would recommend? For the most part, all of the areas
>> (approx 12 acres of combined slopes) I would be working have been
>> largely cleaned of heavy tree growth but we are still talking weed
>> control (burdock, thistle, multiflora etc). Can the better commercial
>> 48" walk behinds handle this stuff? We don't use chemicals here 
and
>> between the sheep and frequent clipping the weeds ARE slowly
>> disappearing but there are areas such as one of the least used trails
>> between paddocks that are still heavy in burdock. I don't mind losing
>> a blade to chips and dings several times over the summer, but I
>> wouldn't want to lose the engine from binding it up. We recently
>> picked up a used 250HP ATV and at some point (money) would like to add
>> a brushcutter to it, but I know from all my walking management and
>> experience that some of the areas I cut on foot will never work wtih
>> the ATV- brushcutter either and something else is needed that I can
>> walk behind.
>> 
>> I've been reading reviews of all the major models and would want to
>> maximize my limited dollars. Obviously the wider cut would be a joy
>> for me but I'm trying to understand the different drives (someone said
>> NOT to get hydro?) and would like some advice on which brands and
>> models would be best. My thought has been that since money on any farm
>> is very tight, whichever model I end up with should be able to be a
>> fairly all-purpose machine as I also have personal lawn areas. In this
>> regard farming stops being similar to a landscaping business: We
>> cannot afford to have 20 tools for similar tasks and try to made do
>> with as much all-purpose as possible. With my Stihl FS200 now ruined,
>> I am left with my much smaller Stihl FS85 and a little 22" mower 
(yes,
>> I DO take it out and mow those slopes with it -even the most severe of
>> them!- but the lack of power makes for a very painful day).
>> 
>> We are at the height of grass season obviously and, with my husband
>> working 6 days a week, the work is piling up on me now. Any advice you
>> all can offer would be very greatly appreciated. I would also love to
>> hear from any of you that have any well-advised choices for sale at a
>> reasonable cost.
>> 
>> Thanks folks
>> Cynthia in Central Wisconsin
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Graze-l mailing list
> Graze-l@witt.ac.nz
> http://graze-l.witt.ac
.nz/mailman/listinfo/graze-l
> 
> 
> This communication - including any attachments - may contain legally
> privileged information, and is confidential to the addressee.  If you are 
not
> the intended recipient you should delete the communication and contact the
> sender immediately.  If you have received this e-mail in error, you must 
not
> read, copy, disseminate, distribute or otherwise use or disclose any part 
of
> this communication, or any information on matters or persons to which it
> refers.  WITT reserves the right to monitor all e-mail communications sent
> through its network.
> 
> 

Headlines via AgMetaSearchsm ..





FarmToday, The Internet Home for Today's Farmers.. (sm)

Copyright © 2008 Creative Business Concepts
All Rights Reserved





Get Adobe Reader Get Microsoft Office





Monday, December 1, 2008

Pennsylvania


Dauphin County Edition

Zip Code:  
The zipcode value determines localized news and weather content.
Overcast
Current Conditions in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Weather Advisories

Last Updated:8:56 AM EST December 1, 2008
Conditions:Overcast
Temperature:39° F
Wind Chill:39° F
Humidity:96%
Dew Point:38° F
Wind:North at 0 MPH
Pressure:29.52 Inches
Visibility:9.0 Miles
Sun Rise:07:11 AM
Sun Set:04:41 PM
Moon Rise:10:27 AM
Moon Set:08:00 PM


U.S. Department of Agriculture

Weekly Weather and Crop Bulletin



paper clip

 Anxiety Rising Over Changes To Proposed Pa. Dog Law Regulations

 Farmer Adds More To Open Space

 Produce Vouchers For Senior Citizens Available

 Poultrymen Praise Cruelty Acquittal Of Lancaster Egg Farm

 Imported Wood Ban

 Scientists Find Clue To Cause Of Bee Disease

 Capitol Matters: Milk And Gasoline Volatile Combination For Governor

 Retail Food Prices Hit 17-year Peak

 State Grange Sets Policies For 2008; Group More About Family Than Farm

 Maritime Honey Industry Gathers In Charlo


paper clip

 County VET Offers A Kind Of Pet Hospice

 N.J.s Agriculture Secretary Leaving Amid Discord

 Scientists Turn Beet Pulp Into Plastic

 Educator: AG Is 'the Lifeblood Of Nebraska'

 Jean Barton:ranch Brands, Vaccinates Calves

 Colo Conservation Districts Meet In Estes Park

 Packing Industry Consolidation Concerns Montana Cattlemen

 Bald Eagles In Catskills Show Increasing Mercury

 Conservation Officials Recognized

 Support New England Agriculture -- Pass The Cranberry Sauce Please


paper clip


RSS



Site Map

More Links