
12/17/08, 10:12 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,064
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Hi Mike
The first question I would ask is the land above or below the glaciation line? That being, is the ground actually soil, or is it piles of glacial rock? Then there is the aspect and slope of the land and the general characteristics of your soil? What kind of prices are you actually talking about? If you are comparing the cost of raw land to to residential areas, even 1/10 the price is still a rip-off!
Basicly, your idea is to convert the land from mowed forest into animal pasture. Sounds like it's do-able, but expect it to take a lot longer than a year to get grass established for cattle. More like 5-10 I would say. The remaining cull trees can be cut down and goats will help take care of the brush, but it will be a while before there's enough grass for cattle. I guess about 10 years, based on what I get done on my own property.
I would suggest first going all out and reclaiming 1 acre to start your garden in. Stumps will have to be bulldozed out, and the surface graded. Weeding will be a nightmare for the first few years as the remaining brush tries to resprout. You can pen your animals in the future garden area first and let them do some of the work, but you'll have to redistribute them as they consume whatever feed is available to them. You are going to have to build a lot of fencing to keep animals where you want them so you get the level of brush control that you want. Eventually for your mature homestead you'll want several paddocks anyway, so individual areas are rested while others are intensly grazed. Expect to move them for paddock to paddock for a couple of years to get the level of control that you want, and still provide feed for your animals.
Another thing to consider is replanting some of the area back to trees. They can be timber trees, but I would only plant things that produce something edible. Trees like blight-resistant chestnut, walnut, maple, and regular orchard trees like apples, pears, cherries, ect. An orchard the size of an acre would supply all the fruits and nuts your family can be expected to consume.
Wish you well,
Michael
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