Have about 40 acres of mixed hardwood and softwood trees on home 1/4. Been here since my great grandfather was here. Mentally deficient I know. Always thought I lived in the deep woods as a kid.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Poplar trees
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
Originally posted by Sheepwheat View Post
For me, the benefits are far greater than the minimal loss near the tree line. Not for everyone though, and I get that. Sort of. Lol
Comment
-
When my great great grandfather and his sons settled this country there wasn’t a single tree. They had to travel 10 miles to the river for wood. Prairie fires were rampant and there are still signs of one furrow fire breaks to this day. Once fires were brought under control by cultivation the trees pretty much took over. It’s funny but this farm has probably brushed a 1000 acres over the years. Now with zero tillage the pot hole sloughs spread out unless you disk the edges religiously. I don’t mind leaving bush as long as you can manage the spread but they sure can suck up water. Sometimes those potholes are best left alone as the trees suck up excess water but provide a water source for the cows. Aside from the 2002 drought we’ve never run out of water.
Comment
-
Originally posted by makar View PostSave a tree shoot a beaver, maybe two if its a slow day.
Comment
-
The comments about poplar being a weed are amusing. Through large parts of what is farmed in AB and SK, balsam poplar and aspen poplar were the dominant tree species before it was all cleared. We are the weed, not them.
I get it though. They're damn annoying if a guy has no use for them.
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment