Monday 26 September 2016

Raking out the bottom of the hedges

A task taking a couple of days at this time of year is to rake the grass out of the hedge bottoms. I am trying to encourage the wildflowers such a red campion and garlic-mustard to grow, so I used roundup about 6 weeks ago to create bare patches at the bottom of the hedges around the wildflower meadow, and along the woodland paths. I have now used the front bar cutting mower to cut right up to the hedge - and then with a hay rake have moved away the long dead grass to expose the new wildflowers coming through below.

This makes a huge difference to the amount of light getting into the hedge bottom, and I hope that with a few weeks left before the frosts start this will give the flowers a real chance to get going. The two pictures below are a before and after of the same piece of hedge. Look at how lots of small green plants (red campion) are revealed when the long dry grass is raked away.



All of the grass cuttings then need to be pitchforked up to the grass heap, so it is a job that takes a couple of days.
I haven't noticed the swallows around for about 2 weeks now, so nature is telling me to get on with the autumn planting and cutting jobs.




Saturday 17 September 2016

What a difference a harrowing makes.

The wildflower meadow has now been harrowed - so there are lots of bare patches of earth. This picture is taken in exactly the same area that I photographed the dense dead grass thatch (see post on 15th September). It now looks very different.
There are the green shoots of new seedlings growing in the patches of earth, so even under the dead grass 'thatch' the seeds were germinating. Time now to get scattering the seeds that I collected a couple of months ago. I want to increase the amount of hay rattle in the upper part of the meadow where the grass is still quite coarse. I am also going to 'top off' this area in the late autumn in order to help keep the courses grasses under control. I guess that it is all about achieving a balance - many years ago autumn grazing by cattle would have achieved the same effect.

The downside of harrowing is that all of the scrapings have to be dealt with. The farmer helpfully leaves them all in the same place - but then it is a hay rake and pitchfork job to move them into a grass heap (if left where they are it would just become a patch of nettles and docks in the field due to the high nutrient area that they would create).










Friday 16 September 2016

Who is making the trail?

I saw this well marked trail leading from a cut path then going under a hedge and it made me wonder who had made it.



We have foxes, muntjac deer and badgers who could have been responsible, so I set up a motion detection camera to find out.


The first night revealed who had been treading this path!

Thursday 15 September 2016

Field and grass cutting

The field has been cut - much later than I have done this before so it will be interesting to see the results.
It has not been harrowed so there is still a dense thatch that is preventing the light getting to the seeds on the ground.
It will be harrowed soon, so this will let the light in and get the seeds to germinate.

The late summer cut is also underway - I am doing this for some of the borders and hedge bottoms to grow the later flowering summer plants that will not survive the earlier cut is in the spring meadow.

This labour intensive, as it needs to be done by front bar mower, hay rake and scythe.

I found a strange hole in the grass that looked like a bowl with a hole in the earth underneath it. This looked very strange so I moved the grass with a pitch fork - the ran as fast as I could when I saw the number of wasps flying in and out!