Hob 'n Grind
Member
Hello everyone. I have recently joined this forum and this is my first post. In December of 2017 I was able to acquire my first piece of property located in SC Pennsylvania and have begun learning as much as I can about habitat management. Previously, I purely hunted public land in PA as well as in Kansas (lived in KS for 4 years after college). After buying the property my eyes were opened to the huge potential there is in managing and manipulating the land to improve it for wildlife. I have done a lot of reading on this forum, and there seems to be some great habitat focused people here. Because of this I was hoping you could potentially help me out with my unique situation:
This property was previously owned by the adjacent township, and the ~15 acre field was used as a spray field for the local water treatment facility to release treated water back into the environment. The field had a network of pipes running underground, that lead to spray heads where the water would be sprayed on the field. Before I bought the property, all of the pipes / spray heads were removed and back filled. Unfortunately, the back fill job was not done very well and the field is now extremely lumpy with some high humps and pretty deep ditches. Currently, the field is mostly fescue and some reed's canary grass, as well as a few weeds.
While I would love to jump right into improving the field with warm season grasses and tree plantings, I think it might be a huge headache to manage this field down the road with how lumpy the field is, especially when considering the warm season grass management. Another factor is the effort it will take to kill all of the cool season grasses currently growing in the field. Seeing as I do not yet own a tractor it seems like a tall task to manage the field effectively at this point.
One thought I had was to let a farmer plant crops on the ground for a few years. It seems like this could benefit me because the field would need to be smoothed out, and the grass would be killed through spraying. Of course a negative of this route is that I would have to delay any improvements on this field for a few years.
My question is, would it be a good idea to let a local farmer plant crops on this field for a few years? What do you think? Thanks for your help!
This property was previously owned by the adjacent township, and the ~15 acre field was used as a spray field for the local water treatment facility to release treated water back into the environment. The field had a network of pipes running underground, that lead to spray heads where the water would be sprayed on the field. Before I bought the property, all of the pipes / spray heads were removed and back filled. Unfortunately, the back fill job was not done very well and the field is now extremely lumpy with some high humps and pretty deep ditches. Currently, the field is mostly fescue and some reed's canary grass, as well as a few weeds.
While I would love to jump right into improving the field with warm season grasses and tree plantings, I think it might be a huge headache to manage this field down the road with how lumpy the field is, especially when considering the warm season grass management. Another factor is the effort it will take to kill all of the cool season grasses currently growing in the field. Seeing as I do not yet own a tractor it seems like a tall task to manage the field effectively at this point.
One thought I had was to let a farmer plant crops on the ground for a few years. It seems like this could benefit me because the field would need to be smoothed out, and the grass would be killed through spraying. Of course a negative of this route is that I would have to delay any improvements on this field for a few years.
My question is, would it be a good idea to let a local farmer plant crops on this field for a few years? What do you think? Thanks for your help!