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Cedar trees in pasture #8588806
Yesterday at 06:40 PM
Yesterday at 06:40 PM
Joined: Jul 2012
Nebraska
WadeRyan Offline OP
trapper
WadeRyan  Offline OP
trapper

Joined: Jul 2012
Nebraska
I’ve spent the last two months on my days off and weekends clearing one of our pastures. Let it go for too long. We’ve had a couple guys over the years get the larger ones but this year I made it a mission to get the small ones cleared. 80 acres doesn’t seem like much till there’s a tree every step. Local fire department was finally able to help out (wind had to be out of the north for it to work not an easy feat in the spring). Today was my last day of chain saws and blade on a weed eater. Good solid work and it’ll be an ongoing battle to keep them contained. Now I just have to decide what to do with the locust popping up.

Makes a pretty good deer location. Hadn’t shot but one since 2009 but took two out of this pasture this year. Interestingly I found 16 deer skeletons after the burn (some had been there quite a while) I can only assume they were hit on the highway as most weren’t far from it. Never would have seen them until the burn. Too bad this fresher one would have grown up to have been nice.



[Linked Image]
[Linked Image]
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[Linked Image]
[Linked Image]


Follow me on YouTube if you’re bored

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5Ulx1woYMmCN3IPLB0wwFw


Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588808
Yesterday at 06:49 PM
Yesterday at 06:49 PM
Joined: Jul 2012
Nebraska
WadeRyan Offline OP
trapper
WadeRyan  Offline OP
trapper

Joined: Jul 2012
Nebraska
Two bucks I took this year from the pasture (cows were still in it while I hunted).

[Linked Image]

Dead head from two springs ago, another highway victim.

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Last years shed.

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The tree boss my wife. Once she got the chainsaw I couldn’t keep it away from her. Named her Agatha.

[Linked Image]


Follow me on YouTube if you’re bored

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Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588809
Yesterday at 06:53 PM
Yesterday at 06:53 PM
Joined: Jan 2018
MN
D
Donnersurvivor Offline
trapper
Donnersurvivor  Offline
trapper
D

Joined: Jan 2018
MN
Good work, reminds me to go chop mine while the trees are small.


I don't know half of you half as well as I should like, & I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve
Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588813
Yesterday at 07:06 PM
Yesterday at 07:06 PM
Joined: May 2011
Kansas
K
Kansas Cat Offline
trapper
Kansas Cat  Offline
trapper
K

Joined: May 2011
Kansas
I think fire is the best way to control small cedars. I keep nippers and a spray bottle of Tordon with me. It takes a long time but you can eventually get ahead of locust. They are truly a pain and the worst tree we deal with in our area.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588820
Yesterday at 07:13 PM
Yesterday at 07:13 PM
Joined: Mar 2010
2A Sanctuaries-W. OK & N. NM
Blaine County Offline
trapper
Blaine County  Offline
trapper

Joined: Mar 2010
2A Sanctuaries-W. OK & N. NM
Love killing cedars! Nice work.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588917
Yesterday at 10:01 PM
Yesterday at 10:01 PM
Joined: Jan 2017
Marion Kansas
Y
Yes sir Offline
trapper
Yes sir  Offline
trapper
Y

Joined: Jan 2017
Marion Kansas
[Linked Image]

We don't like cedars either. Two summers ago I spent any where from 2 hours to 6 hours every Saturday morning for about 3 months cutting cutting big ones out of a pasture that had been neglected.

Nice deer

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588928
Yesterday at 10:20 PM
Yesterday at 10:20 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Very SE Nebraska
G
Gary Benson Offline
trapper
Gary Benson  Offline
trapper
G

Joined: Dec 2006
Very SE Nebraska
You on Hwy 75 WadeRyan?


Life ain't supposed to be easy.
Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588934
Yesterday at 10:49 PM
Yesterday at 10:49 PM
Joined: Jan 2019
North central Iowa
B
Bob_Iowa Offline
trapper
Bob_Iowa  Offline
trapper
B

Joined: Jan 2019
North central Iowa
We’re having trouble here in corn and bean fields, we notill and the chemicals don’t do much to the trees.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8588968
8 hours ago
8 hours ago
Joined: Nov 2010
Rochester, MN
Teacher Offline
trapper
Teacher  Offline
trapper

Joined: Nov 2010
Rochester, MN
This is kind of interesting. I’ve been following guys on YouTube who say fox and coon head towards cedar trees for overhead cover. But you’re taking them out!


Never too old to learn
Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: Teacher] #8588981
6 hours ago
6 hours ago
Joined: Jan 2018
MN
D
Donnersurvivor Offline
trapper
Donnersurvivor  Offline
trapper
D

Joined: Jan 2018
MN
Originally Posted by Teacher
This is kind of interesting. I’ve been following guys on YouTube who say fox and coon head towards cedar trees for overhead cover. But you’re taking them out!

Coons are worth $6 and a steer is worth $3,000, easy choice there.


I don't know half of you half as well as I should like, & I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve
Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8589011
5 hours ago
5 hours ago
Joined: Feb 2014
Ky
jbyrd63 Offline
trapper
Happy Birthday jbyrd63  Offline
trapper

Joined: Feb 2014
Ky
Any water close by? That many dead deer in a area sounds like EHD.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8589012
5 hours ago
5 hours ago
Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
jabNE Offline
trapper
jabNE  Offline
trapper

Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
Nice job Wade.
My wife bought a new Echo 20” 4920 to take down dead ash on our place.
I’m not sure if she will let me touch it other than to sharpen saw teeth for her and maybe go get her more mix gas.
She is not a flowers gal, but buy her a chainsaw or put her in seat of heavy equipment and she is so happy.
That’s what makes life fun, right?
Jim


Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8589017
5 hours ago
5 hours ago
Joined: Jul 2012
Nebraska
WadeRyan Offline OP
trapper
WadeRyan  Offline OP
trapper

Joined: Jul 2012
Nebraska
Gary highway 8 down on the Kansas line.

Jbyrd we’ve had the pasture for 10 or so years. There’s water there found all the skeletons just off the highway away from water. First time the winds worked for a burn. Some of them had been there for some time. Still a healthy population there.

Teacher there’s still more raccoons there then I’d want to deal with. There’s a few large cottonwoods I’m sure packed full of them. Hadn’t seen any fox there too far from town coyotes have their way. Hard to explain but that many cedars it just chokes out the grass. No grass no point in a pasture.

Jim you know as well as me happy wife happy life.


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Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8589018
4 hours ago
4 hours ago
Joined: Nov 2025
Holmes co. Oh.
S
Skippy 1 Offline
trapper
Skippy 1  Offline
trapper
S

Joined: Nov 2025
Holmes co. Oh.
I'm envious of your making those big burns. All I've got to do was little ditch burns.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: WadeRyan] #8589040
4 hours ago
4 hours ago
Joined: May 2011
Kansas
K
Kansas Cat Offline
trapper
Kansas Cat  Offline
trapper
K

Joined: May 2011
Kansas
We burn quite a few acres. Dry years can be pretty hairy. We deal with more obstacles than guys like Yessir further west.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: Teacher] #8589042
3 hours ago
3 hours ago
Joined: Dec 2008
MN
W
walleye101 Online content
trapper
walleye101  Online Content
trapper
W

Joined: Dec 2008
MN
Originally Posted by Teacher
This is kind of interesting. I’ve been following guys on YouTube who say fox and coon head towards cedar trees for overhead cover. But you’re taking them out!


I think they are dealing with Red Cedar as a pest tree in pastures. Quite different than White cedar we have in MN.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: Skippy 1] #8589106
52 minutes ago
52 minutes ago
Joined: Feb 2020
Indiana
P
Providence Farm Offline
trapper
Providence Farm  Offline
trapper
P

Joined: Feb 2020
Indiana
Originally Posted by Skippy 1
I'm envious of your making those big burns. All I've got to do was little ditch burns.


No kidding. I was going to burn a few acres on my farm. I mowed a 15 foot section around the square, started a fire that was fighting the wind so I could control it and mak a nice 25 foot bury out fire break with the plan of lighting it on the other end and letting the wind push it to the burnt spot and die out.

Everything was going smoothly tell the wind changed. I was lucky to get it put out. I didnt have arm hair or eyelashes by the time it was out. I have not had a good size fire since im gun shy now. Would love to burn off several of my fields.

Re: Cedar trees in pasture [Re: walleye101] #8589130
16 minutes ago
16 minutes ago
Joined: Dec 2013
Flint Hills, KS
J
jht Offline
trapper
jht  Offline
trapper
J

Joined: Dec 2013
Flint Hills, KS
Originally Posted by walleye101
Originally Posted by Teacher
This is kind of interesting. I’ve been following guys on YouTube who say fox and coon head towards cedar trees for overhead cover. But you’re taking them out!


I think they are dealing with Red Cedar as a pest tree in pastures. Quite different than White cedar we have in MN.

Yep, we're out in the grasslands, and without fire our pastures turn into woodlots. Without burning, a clean native grass pasture can become a closed-canopy forest in a few short decades. If there is a good seed source nearby or a few woody plants in the pasture already, it'll disappear even faster. Eastern Redcedar is easy to kill with periodic fire, but the broadleaf resprouting shrubs and deciduous trees are harder to deal with. Best to never let them get established in the first place, and for that it takes burning nearly every year (and making sure your cattle leave enough grass behind, so that your pasture can actually burn). I'm a bit north of Yessir but in the same region. We've got a good 3500 acres burned thus far this year. Probably have another 5000 to go. It is a lot of fun to make big fire, and it's great to see those cedars go up. Good on you, Wade!

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