Addicting
Well-known member
We have that but this is mixed with large cherry and poplar trees. The cherry’s push out easy but the poplars are a pain.I saw you said that you already talked to them about it, so this recommendation may or may not help, depending on your goals for the property.
My parents bought their forever place in 1981 after the farmer of the time converted his ag-fields to 10-acre parcel subdivisions(township rules at the time only permitted 10 acre minimum splits). My parent bought 3 parcels and put their house in the center parcel. Fast forward to 2010 and the two side parcels, 10 acres each, were so choked with Autumn Olives you couldn't even walk through it. My father talked to the largest farmer within 10 miles and agreed to have the farmer clear the fields in exchange for a number of years of "free rent" to farm corn/beans. If I remember correctly it was between 3-5 years.
Farmer came in with a dozer and pushed them all into a big hole he dug in the center of each 10 acres. Then a tractor with a big enough plow and disk to cut right through the remaining roots and they were in business. Did it all in a weekend. Waited a year for the pile in the middle to dry and then lit it on fire and then farmed on top of the ashes.
It ended up making a significant impact on the wildlife sightings and hunting setup. Some positive, some negative. Either way, the property was cleared for no out of pocket cost to my folks and it setup 2, 10 acre parcels to hunt near. If the people you are buying it from are interested into it turning back into productive property and it aligns with what you would want for the property, there may be some farmers near you who would be willing to work out a deal in exchange for free land-rent.
I cleared about an acre of it already on my property. Excavator, big pile, pit, then burnt in the pit. The topsoil was raked thru and two more piles of roots had to get buried. It still kept coming back so we had to deep plow it and bury most of the top soil.
Corn and bean rotation with constant tillage would have allowed us to keep more topsoil. We put in alfalfa. Can’t have the autumn olive shoots constantly coming up.
