Looking really good. What type of rotation are you looking to do and will you be burning some slopes more frequently than others?
I think that I will probably be looking at maybe a three year rotation. I'm still on a learning curve here. And thanks.
Just looking at those pics makes me nervous!!
I hope that you don't think that I'm a whimp but I took the day off of burning yesterday to give my heart a day to rest.
Gotta have courage to light it up like that, haha. Seems like all that ash would make an ideal seedbed, you going to plant wheat or something in there or is it still too shady for that?
The first time that I tried this I hacked with glysophate and trees didn't die or die fast enough. I put out radish and rye which germinated great but just languished with out enough light. This time using triclopyr I'm hoping for quicker results. In the last burn area , for example, I'm estimating about an 80% canopy reduction, 95% mid story, with the fire taking out all ground level. I have beans, clovers, and clover mixes, radish, rape. wheat, and rye on hand and I'm planning on throwing the kitchen sink at some of these areas. I'm going to throw it at the wall and see what sticks.
I worked for the county not the Feds yesterday and finished cleaning up leaners over the road.
I tended more roses pre burn on the right.
I have expanded today's burn area into an area that I burned 2-3 years ago, an area of mostly dead ash and now dead sourgum post burn. After the first burn the vegetation grew up thick and tall and the deer really liked the area.
Peach flowers that experienced the cold nights.
Other flowers that were pre emergent seem to be fine.
G