I'm doing something I have named
"Ditch Farming." In the ditches between my native grass fields I killed the large useless trees like maples, gums, etc. so that a flush of new native growth would come up. Then once or twice a year I just drive by in my pickup truck and spray tanks in the back and nuke anything coming up that is not good - leaving the plants that I want. Here are some reasons I do this:
- Ditches are usually wasted space. Now we can make them useful.
- The soil is generally very fertile because nothing is ever taken off of it.
- The moisture is good in ditches.
- Sunlight is good.
- It's easy to drive by once a year with a sprayer and take care of what you don't want.
- You can also use a pole saw from the edges to cut stuff down if you don't want to spray.
- Great native plants come up - jewel weed, persimmon, blackberry, elderberry, hazelnut, sumacs, vining honeysuckles, arrowwood viburnum, dogwoods, etc.
- It's basically free and easy. You would not even need to spray every year. I could do it once every three years or even more.
- It's fun seeing what pops up next.
- You can balance the plant community to suit your wants. Blackberry is good, but if you start getting too much of it, you can kill a section and let other plants come up to replace it. Basically you can do anything you want easily.
Some of the best habitat I have is in ditches. I've set in the stand many times and watched the deer walk along the edges like a buffet line. Not sure why more people aren't doing this. Best wishes.