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Re: Cedar trees in pasture
[Re: WadeRyan]
#8589179
03/26/26 02:43 PM
03/26/26 02:43 PM
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Joined: Dec 2015
se South Dakota
NonPCfed
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2015
se South Dakota
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Yep, fire or heavy grazing (well, heavy enough) will keep the "eastern red 'cedars'" (actually its a species of juniper) under control. I can tell when the land use changes (cattle grazing is no longer going on) when the "cedars" start popping up. Because of various reasons, there are pasture parcels around here that are no longer grazed. There are other reasons, but mostly because more and more southeastern South Dakota farmers are now cash "grain" only guys (corn and soybeans) and don't bother with cattle. Property tax of pasture land is (fairly) cheap and if these guys can't get someone to graze their patches, it just sits there. There's probably some tax angle in it that non-rented pasture land gets written off as a business "loss", with probably Cargill and the other big international dry ag commodity corporations championing it into the federal tax code  .
"And God said, Let us make man in our image �and let them have dominion �and all the creatures that move along the ground". Genesis 1:26
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Re: Cedar trees in pasture
[Re: coytrpr]
#8589407
03/26/26 08:50 PM
03/26/26 08:50 PM
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Joined: Jan 2017
Marion Kansas
Yes sir
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2017
Marion Kansas
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Once asked a friend who ranches 12,000 goats in Texas why they always had to do intensive brush (juniper/cedar) removal with heavy equipment if goats were supposed to be so good at eating brush. His response was that they wouldn't eat it until they had eaten everything else first. After years of guiding and trapping on the ranch I can verify his response was accurate. We tried sheep for several years for control weeds and brush and id totally agree. Good grass is higher on their list than most weeds and brush.
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Re: Cedar trees in pasture
[Re: WadeRyan]
#8589454
03/26/26 10:03 PM
03/26/26 10:03 PM
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Joined: Dec 2015
se South Dakota
NonPCfed
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2015
se South Dakota
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Ive never seen heavy grazing hinder cedar at all It does around here, but perhaps our seed bed isn't as saturated as it is in your part of Kansas. We had (and have) fewer overall natural trees in this part of South Dakota and even the shelter belts planted during the 1930s and '40s are dying out. I've wanted to take this photo for a number of months but the timing was right for me or the right angle. Finally took it the other day. The old cottonwood wasn't down in the township road ditch as most of the old planted cottonwoods in the late 1800s/early 1900s were but was up on the edge of a crop field. The farmers tolerated it for a long time but then it got split in two during a thunderstorm a couple of years back and the guy operating the land now finally cut the rest down except the stump. About 90% cropland in what can been seen in the photo. ![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2026/03/full-47056-289370-20260325_113739.jpg)
"And God said, Let us make man in our image �and let them have dominion �and all the creatures that move along the ground". Genesis 1:26
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Re: Cedar trees in pasture
[Re: Kansas Cat]
#8589673
03/27/26 11:34 AM
03/27/26 11:34 AM
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Joined: Dec 2023
MO
BC-Buck
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2023
MO
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I just got back to this thread. I am seeing quite a bit of good information on this thread. One thing I haven't seen mentioned is what prairie actually is. A healthy native landscape contains well over a hundred plant species. When I was younger, we had plenty of those in our area. We have only a few left. If you see a pasture with only two or three grass species and no forbs, it is not a healthy pasture. I personally like to burn early most years. Burning early encourages forb production. Unfortunately, early burning does nothing to control fescue. Once in awhile I will burn a piece as late as I can get it to light. If you have enough residual native, this practice will really discourage fescue. We typically rely on mechanical removal of woody species but we are only dealing with hundreds of acres. We also hay everything we can and don't run any livestock on our native pastures. Fescue will be first thing to green up and 2QPA 41% will help. Fescue removal and cedar will bring back natives.
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Re: Cedar trees in pasture
[Re: WadeRyan]
#8589727
03/27/26 01:00 PM
03/27/26 01:00 PM
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Joined: May 2011
Kansas
Kansas Cat
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2011
Kansas
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Our ground contains an extensive seed library. In areas that are 100% cedar. I have observed if you remove the cedars, and are patient, a good native landscape can be regenerated. It requires mowing for the first few years to control broadleaf weeds and expose the understory to sunshine. After a couple of years you will have good native grass and a fairly healthy forb population. If you are impatient and resort to chemicals, you create voids and encourage really nasty invasives.
Last edited by Kansas Cat; 03/27/26 02:35 PM.
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Re: Cedar trees in pasture
[Re: WadeRyan]
#8589731
03/27/26 01:04 PM
03/27/26 01:04 PM
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Joined: May 2011
Kansas
Kansas Cat
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2011
Kansas
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I have used Plateau and Roundup with varying levels of success. If johnson grass is present, Plateau is a must and establishing natives is difficult. Plateau will kill immature native grasses.
Last edited by Kansas Cat; 03/27/26 01:05 PM.
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