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I've let my pastures go WAY beyond where I usually do this year. It's just been a crazy year with a million things going on and not enough time for everything. I've finally got a free weekend and hooked the bush hog up, but now I'm second guessing myself.

On the one hand I don't want the woody veg to get a foot hold again, and there's quite a bit of clover and alfalfa that still hold on out there and does quite well when I keep the fields short.

On the other hand the song birds are loving these over grown pastures. I bet I saw 20 different species out there this morning including about 100 goldfinches all over the thistles. I've also seen more rabbits this summer than I have in years. I'm sure the tall grass helps their chances greatly.

Right now the fields are knee to chest high with a great variety of grasses, weeds and wild flowers. It's too late in the season to expect much regrowth before the freeze. I'm thinking just let it go and cut in the spring. Any thoughts?


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Mow half.

Mow a strip, skip a strip.

Not knowing where you are, what your goals are, and probably a dozen other details (like how well the fish might be biting if you decide to fish and not mow), there isn't a lot one can really say.


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if you have horses grazing the pasture then cut it.


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Yep, I"d leave some and mow some. Best of both worlds.

The worst, IMHO, is to be total cover or total food.


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I'd let it be


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My first thought was mowing strips, unless you can graze it.


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No grazers here. This is strictly for personal enjoyment and the benefit to wildlife. There's no lack of food this year here for the deer. Corn and winter wheat surround me, plus i just put in 2+ acres of oats just for the deer. Apples and pears are the best crop in years not to mention crab apples. I haven't been out to survey the acorns but if they are like everything else it should be a bumper year.

I'm thinking I'll just mow a couple passes around the outside edges to keep the woods from encroaching and leave the rest. We had a hen turkey hanging out in the pasture this spring and we're pretty sure she was nesting there. I let it go hoping she could get a nest off without being disturbed. The farmers here cut hay so early that most field nests don't stand a chance.


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I cant recall where i read it, but in regards to turkey, they nest in the tall grass NEXT TO The woods.

So DONT cut the grass right up against the woods. It allows an escape path from the high grass if you leave the grass right next to the hard woods for them when pressured by yotes, hawks, or us.

Start cutting out a bit further. Like 4 or 5 foot.

I like the idea of cutting some and leaving some. Song birds are great enjoyment.

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even though animals browse on browse and not so much grass, that browse can get old and tough. Bush hogging makes it develop new tender growht. Just FWIW


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cut the whole field the birds will love the seeds and the bugs the Bush Hog will make more available to them . Deer will like the field better with new clover growth


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One caveat: You can easily bush hog a fawn in the tall grass. Lots of people have done it. Since you've waited this long I'd probably wait a little longer but that's just me. It would torture me to know that I'd run over a baby deer with a bush hog.

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Since you don't want woody stuff to get back in, I'd mow strips and then alternate either later this year or next year. Keep some tall grass at all times. If you have treelines, only mow half of the grass along those rather than the entire line.

Reminds me I have to get the birdfeeders filled up and start feeding the goldfinches before they lose their summer colors. Love those birds.


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This late in the year, I don't think you are very likely to mow a fawn. They are pretty mobile now.


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Originally Posted by toltecgriz
My first thought was mowing strips, unless you can graze it.


I've got some I keep in strips.

When the growing up section gets saplings, I cut them and let the other parts go.

It's good animal habitat, and the deer, quail and rabbits love it, and it keeps me in blackberries.

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I don't know what plant hardiness zone you are in. If in the northern zones, clover and alfalfa will be storing energy reserves in the roots now or soon.

Do not cut now. I would develop your plan for the pastures this winter and act accordingly in the spring.


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Originally Posted by MColeman
One caveat: You can easily bush hog a fawn in the tall grass. Lots of people have done it. Since you've waited this long I'd probably wait a little longer but that's just me. It would torture me to know that I'd run over a baby deer with a bush hog.


It sucks. My dad hit one with the hay mower once. Kinda sad but it happens. Course I'll be 30 next month and thats the only time I can recall so not too bad I guess.

I have hit a hen setting on eggs before with the lawn mower. Kinda bad deal too. Poof.



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If you're worried about songbirds, rabbits, and fawns, you don't have pastures. You have nature plots.


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Mow it in strips. Fawns and turkey poults should be a non issue at this point. The only small critters you'd need to worry about would be rabbits and they'll usually go under the mower without being harmed.


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I would mow it all.

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If feasible I would leave it until spring. I would then burn it off. Will get rid of a lot of undesirable plants and release a lot of nutrients into the soil.

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