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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Saving wildlife when mowing.

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IaGary

06-03-2006 04:24:37




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Well I did get started on mowing hay yesterday.

Hay was taller than I expected.

Maybe with Allans help there will be a couple of pictures.

Does any body do anything to help save the wildlife when mowing?

Killed a hen pheasant on the third round.

Gary




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Farmered

06-04-2006 03:09:15




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
I remember my father mowing with an 8N and a side mount bar mower. A pair of red foxes ran along ahead of the tractor catching mice that jumped out to escape the mower. They showed no fear and were so close that the front wheels nearly ran over their tails when they stopped to investigate something. Their hunting was very successful but I wonder how they got the nerve to learn that trick. Ed



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souNdguy

06-03-2006 21:59:27




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
Generally when I mow, i see a variety of snakes, mice, rabbits, and birds scurrying away from the tractor.. all on their own accord. I've been mowing with a 10' mower for a few years, and never killed anything but a snake.. and that was on purpose... However.. i just got to mow with my 15' mower, and danged if a cow bird didn't land right as i was rounding a corner and poof.. a big wad of white feathers shot out the back.

Nothing I could do.. but i didn't intend to hit the bird.

I really really try to avoid gopher tortoises too.. I've skipped rows just to save them.. inconvienient as it is..

Soundguy

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ff316

06-03-2006 16:53:53




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
This reminds me of the time I was driving down a busy road and saw two late teen/early 20's girls standing in the middle of one lane of traffic. When I got closer I saw they were directing traffic away from a pretty large snapping turtle that was crossing the road. This turtle was at least a foot across the shell, probably closer to 18". Then I saw they had a flimsy cardboard box ready to put it in, and load it into the back of their economy car. I really should have pulled over to watch the carnage. Wouldn't you like to see two little girls try to get a monster snapping turtle into a cardboard box and then into that little car? Something tells me their love affair with turtles was over by the end of that day.

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Dale

06-03-2006 15:48:07




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
The booms seem to work pretty well. I don't bother, the more turkeys and deer I can hit with the discbine the better. We're overrun with the stupid things and we can't get enough hunters to kill them fast enough anyway, can't afford the damage they do.



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Billy NY

06-03-2006 07:12:51




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
third party image

Years ago, when pheasants were abundant, remember whacking a hen, with the mower conditioner in our alfalfa, but saved the chicks and raised them. Machinery is tough on the critters, but I play fair, I'll get out of the seat to move so much as a toad if I see one, I won't go out of my way to hit the target, like some people do when they see a turtle on the road. It's funny while mowing, everything heads for the uncut stuff, get's smaller and smaller as you go around, then everything makes a break for it, rabbits, frogs, mice etc..... then the clean up crew comes by, crows, hawks, darn crow was just tormenting a cornsnake one time, had to go break that one up, they eat a lot of mice.

Speaking of those turtles, the commonly found painted turtles here have been a source of an interesting friendship since a kid, we have what was 23 acres of marsh, now a pond, they came out starting May 26th to lay their eggs, and for a few days after, then you might see one or 2. It's funny how I noticed they seem to do this on the exact same day each year, and or darn close, and within feet of the last nest. So you can avoid them for the most part. The photo above is of one that literally came klunking in on the concrete floor around 9:30 P.M. last Sunday night after laying eggs, right up to where I was sitting at my desk in the garage, ( door was up ). Had some mud on the rear fender LOL. Must have been late, she lost her way, needed to stop at the help desk. I'm sitting there, hearing this soft clunking in the dark beyond my desklamp, thinking someone is foolin with me, had no clue what it was. Somehow they know where the best sunny spots are to lay the eggs and certainly know how to get back to the water. A few of us raise them every year as a hobby, and release them after they grow a bit. It's amazing that after the skunks get most of their nests eat their eggs and even if they do make it, they actually make it to the water and don't get eaten up. Long way for a little critter to get to the water. With all the rain, the skunks won't get any this year, the scent is gone. Then the weather gets em, it was so warm this winter, some of them decided to dig out early ( they usually winter over after hatching ) and then got caught in the cold and died. Had it stayed cold, never would have happened, bizzare to find dead hatchlings in January.

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paul

06-03-2006 06:46:28




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
A pipe or so sticking off ahead of the blade helps scare them away.

Dad would lift the mower & leave the nest when he saw them, but would _always_ find a pile of feathers when raking - the fox/ cyotes could find them easy when only a tuft of hay by them.

--->Paul



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R. John Johnson

06-03-2006 06:34:04




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
Years ago I read about a program Ducks Unlimited had in Alberta. They had light weight booms bolted to the front, and off to one side, of the tractor cutting hay. Light chains dangled from the boom and provided noise and motion. This would flush hens off the nest before they were killed. This could be modified to a pusher bar in front of a MoCo.

John



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buickanddeere

06-03-2006 06:49:09




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to R. John Johnson, 06-03-2006 06:34:04  
The boom with dangling chains susupended from the front of the tractor works very well. It gives the animals time to jump up. The farther to the right the better to cover part of the next round as well. The wild turkeys seem to nest in the hayfields and they flush too late.



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Formerly PaMike

06-03-2006 06:25:08




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
I hit a fawn with a flail mower once. Terrible....made me want to cry.



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Lloyd Llama

06-03-2006 06:17:42




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
And if you do get lucky and spot a pheassnt or turkey nest in the uncut portion, it"s already too late. Those hens want the whole field as cover. If you try real hard and leave them a chunk of hay uncut, they"re gone anyway!



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plumboy

06-03-2006 05:36:58




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
I make my best effort.Box turtles,young rabbits,red wing blackbirds really take a beating with spring mowing here.I really had a good crop of young rabbits this year.Their numbers have been way down lately.I got off the tractor to chase a couple off as they get so confused.Then the crows chase them down.You cant start a tractor up and head to the feild without the crows following you out.but thats probly good they clean up the dead so you dont bale it.

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VaTom

06-03-2006 05:08:59




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
Not mowing, but I once had a lady get very upset when she found 2 turtles I'd squashed clearing a few acres for her. Told her that was what happens.

But no. Seems she'd walked the area just before I got there and "told" everybody to take off and find a new home. The turtles hadn't listened to her.

Then there was another one who told me she trained all the ticks and fleas in adjacent fields to leave her and her dog alone. That they never got a flea or tick.

Seems there's a lot I don't know. Maybe you've gotta be more tuned in than I am.....

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Bret4207

06-03-2006 04:48:50




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
All you can do is make a good faith effort. Carrying a 22 to put down any wounded wildlife is a good idea too.



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Jim Johnson

06-03-2006 04:34:58




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 Re: Saving wildlife when mowing. in reply to IaGary, 06-03-2006 04:24:37  
What could you do? I've always wondered,with the noise and vibration why they were not gone. But why do deer run back in front of a car after they are past?



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