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klickitat_gw

Best way to clear out a neglected wooded area?

klickitat
17 years ago

Well, after 1.5 years of killing off the invasive poison ivy and japanese honeysuckle and saplings and numerous unnamed varieties of brush in our 1/4 acre of woods, I find myself unable to figure out a good way to clear all the waste out. It's fenced in so there's such a great option to create a garden hideaway, yet I feel overwhelmed when 3 lawn bags (what I try to clear every weekend) of debris hardly even makes a dent in the mess. At this rate, the woods will be ready for planting when we're living in a new home.

So is there some sort of machinery I can rent that will push or pick or lift this stuff up? The property on the other side of the fence is ours and I'm not opposed to simply lifting and dumping over the other side (even if my husband is, heh). If I can't lift it, what the heck would I do with it after it's pushed out?

Please tell me this isn't a hopeless case. I would love to make the woods a pretty place to visit.

Comments (4)

  • Judy_B_ON
    17 years ago

    most of it will compost away, why not just leave on the ground as mulch? You could rent a chipper and chip the woody stuff (avoid poison ivy) then spread the chips on the ground.

    I would also suggest getting a field guide to shrubs and tree and trying to identify the unknown brush. Some of them may be native plants worth keeping.

    Finally, consider creating a woodland garden that resembles a real forest with multiple small plants and leaf/twig/plant litter on the ground as mulch. The soil will be better if mulched and the mulch will prevent weed seeds from gaining hold. Bare soil is a invitation to weed seeds.

  • klickitat
    Original Author
    17 years ago

    Thanks for the reply. I neglected to mention that the ground right now is a lumpy mess of pine needles and cones from all the fir trees (which I don't mind) covering all sorts of debris that has been tossed back there over the decades. My husband and the previous owners used the wooded area as a place to toss old christmas trees or grass clippings, dead shrubs, you get the picture... It's also lumpy from clumps of clay that were dug up from other areas of our property and dumped back there.

    In my clearing, I've discovered a pair of pants, leftover lumber from the construstruction of our subdivision, dozens of beer bottles and cans, several cinder blocks, plastic tubing that went on for yards and yards (finally threw that in the trash!)...

    I guess that's more of what I was looking for in help with clearing out the area. It would be so nice to have a natural looking yard without the fear of tripping over an invisible stump or getting caught on a prickly vine. All of the fallen trees will remain along with as much of the pine needles and leaves. I'm just flustered over the number of invasive weeds that require constant spraying to keep down.

    Sorry for the awfully long posts.

  • bob64
    17 years ago

    Check out the responses to my question about Debris Reduction in the soil forum. I have a very similar problem.
    Depending on budget you might want to rent or buy a chipper. If the budget is really big, pay someone else to do it.
    What I ended up doing for the time-being is sacrificing some parts of the property to debris piles that I continuously add to. I also break up some debris by hand which makes a big improvement. The stuff in the trash bags could be left in the bags for several months and then dumped out again after it is good and rotten. If getting rid of invasives is your goal then bag up and dispose of anything bearing the seeds of the invasives. I let vines air dry to die and then break them up and toss the remains on the ground. The prickly stuff (like multiflora rose) can be left to dry out and then trampled on to break into small pieces.
    Things do improve but it takes time.

  • klickitat
    Original Author
    17 years ago

    Thanks, Bob. I'll go find that thread. You hit the nail on the head with your comments and I'll put them to good use. I may take some pictures and post them here for advice down the line.

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