Daver
PMA Member
Anyone ever try this idea: in the winter when there's snow on the ground, take a weedburner, drip torch, whatever and light up cedar trees one by one. Our pasture pictured above we really don't want to burn since it's about 200 acres and grazed down pretty thin. It'd be a pain to burn basically. Some year we can get there maybe but not now.
The hopes would be the cedars would get burnt and die, the snow would keep the grass from burning over the whole pasture, the skeletons would be left to be mulched later with a forestry head or just left to break down naturally or by chainsaw over the years.
I'd assume cedars are pretty dry and burnable in January/February?
Although I have not specifically done it the way you describe...I doubt the cedars would burn real well while still living. I am not sure of that, but I also have reason to doubt it would be a winning strategy. I can say that I burned an area on my farm last year mainly to get rid of a big brush pile left over from the pond build a few years ago and at the time of the burn, things got toasted pretty well in that zone. Mainly brome grass, mixed with various volunteer trees, a lot of them cedars that are about 8' to 12' tall.
I just observed the other day that I still have lots of healthy looking cedars in that area. Some may have, and probably did get, burned up...but in the main, no. Some of those places where there are still living cedars now had grass growing up in the branches, etc., and the burning grass was quite a show...but somehow, most/all of those cedars are still there this year.
I also suspect that your "skeletons" would stand for quite a few years before rotting out. If I am picturing your situation correctly...I would rent a skid steer with a saw attachment and attack them that way. Or, if the trees are small enough, a tractor and a brush hog...be sure to wear ear plugs if you go this route.