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douglas9

(4,474 posts)
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 04:36 AM Sep 29

To save the birds, I'm killing my farm

Not long after I bought a dilapidated farm in the Virginia Piedmont, I was surprised to learn that it came with its own farmer.

For years, a cattle farmer from up the road, a salt-of-the-earth guy named Travis, rode his big John Deere over and cut the hayfields in late spring and then again in early fall. The arrangement, common out here, works for both parties: The farmers get hay for their cows, and the landowners get their fields mowed for free.

But this summer, I delivered bad news to Travis. I asked him not to cut most of my fields and paid him so he could buy his hay elsewhere. For decades — perhaps a couple of centuries — this has been pastureland and hayfields. But no longer.

Now, this place is for the birds.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/09/27/bird-habitat-disappearing-hayfields-shrubland/

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
To save the birds, I'm killing my farm (Original Post) douglas9 Sep 29 OP
this is markie Sep 29 #1
this. AllaN01Bear Sep 29 #2
Thank you so much for sharing this. ❤️ littlemissmartypants Sep 29 #3
This has me rethinking my own place RainCaster Sep 29 #4
Grassland birds are hurting Easterncedar Sep 29 #5
Yard birds have all but gone from my yard watrwefitinfor Sep 29 #6

markie

(22,925 posts)
1. this is
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 07:06 AM
Sep 29

why State and local Land Trusts are so important... so important that we work collectively to determine best use of land for the future... Mr. Milbank can afford to do this

RainCaster

(11,545 posts)
4. This has me rethinking my own place
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 10:37 AM
Sep 29

We have acreage that is part woods, part pasture. The tree farm adjacent was cut down several years ago and is being made into high density housing. (Starter homes $800k) Now the deer have moved over to our place, same with the bears. We have ospreys, red tails, barred owls, & pileated woodpeckers that all call this place home.
We're trying to figure out how we can open this to more species without seriously impacting our retirement funds.

Easterncedar

(3,524 posts)
5. Grassland birds are hurting
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 12:19 PM
Sep 29

There’s a program here in Maine to help farmers keep hayfields productive while helping save the nesting bobolinks and marsh sparrows and such, monitoring the fields for them and letting them know when the nestlings have fledged.

watrwefitinfor

(1,404 posts)
6. Yard birds have all but gone from my yard
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 03:58 PM
Sep 29

here in NE South Carolina. When I was a child the yard was always full of dozens of all kinds of birds. When I came back in 1984 they had thinned radically.

Most recently they became more and more rare. This summer I have not seen one bird of any sort, except for one distant soaring hawk. The cardinals, bluejays, mockingbirds, bluebirds, woodpeckers, hummingbirds, sparrows, Carolina wrens (state bird, so numerous my grandmother had to occasioally chase them out of the house with her apron!) and so many more. "Hootie" owls and whip-poor-wills calling from the woods. Doves that nested in the barn loft. So many more. Many I don't evem know their names. They're all gone not leaving a trace.

As a kid there were all sorts of bird songs all the time. Now, nothing. Mornings are silent.

Last bird I saw this summer were the few cardinals that feasted on my blueberry bushes. They left the yard after they devoured the last berry. The jays didn't even make an appearance this year. Even the sweet pair of mourning doves that used to perch on the roof of my barn every summer morning are gone. And I can't remember the last time I heard a bobwhite call from the edge of my neighbor's field.

I think it's mostly because the bugs have left. As recently as ten years ago the ground behind the mower would just swarm with literally thousands of bugs that would rise up in clouds as if rising from the dead and hundreds of dragonflies would assault them while they were airborne. As soon as the mower was gone the new cut grass would be set upon by birds feasting on the bugs as they settled back down.

Now when we mow, there are no bugs. No dragonflies. No birds. Nor do any bugs swarm the outdoor night lights (except the mosquitoes of course). The bugs are gone. That includes even the fireflies. I saw a couple flashing from the edge of the woods last year. This year - none. Also I've seen no wasps, no dirt daubers, no bees, no bats.

Most of all I miss the songs. And I feel so badly for my great grandchildren, who never heard those songs. Who never knew there were songs to hear. (Beyond the older ones, who heard a few mockingbirds whose mocking I pointed out.) How do I explain to them what it was like to come out in the early morning to hear that whole gang chirping and singing as they fluttered around from tree to tree all over the yard?

Sorry, kids. Nothing left here but the mosquitoes and the fireants.

Wat

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