March-April 2007

Leaving Little Impact

Vegetation management options

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By Bill Tice

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Following the removal of the larger brush, UPPCO will often spray a herbicide mix to control the vegetation between cycles. “For us, this program is about safety, saving money, and providing our customers with reliable power delivery,” notes Taggart. “In terms of cost, studies conclude that for every year we let the vegetation grow past the six-year mark, maintenance costs will increase by 7%. Not only that, if we stay on that cycle, our reliability increases because we don’t have large trees falling on our lines, and that also improves safety for our employees and the public.”

Walter Oliver of Oliver’s Bushhogging in Beaufort, SC, has built his business around clearing vegetation. The company, which was established in 2001, completes projects such as underbrush removal for developers, clearing survey lines for survey companies, cleaning up after loggers, removing brush from power line easements, and even cutting trails for horse riders and hikers.

“We do a real mix of jobs,” says Oliver. “A big part of our business is working for commercial and residential developers, but we have worked on all kinds of projects where vegetation has to be removed.”

For development projects, Oliver says his are generally the first crews on a site as underbrush needs to be removed so that the survey crews can get clear site lines and so that everyone can see what they have to work with. He says underbrush, or under story, is anything that is 8 or fewer inches in diameter at chest height.

Oliver’s tools of the trade include six low-ground-pressure track machines from Gyro-Trac USA Inc., including the first machine the Summerville, SC, manufacturer produced. “We have larger Gyro-Trac machines with dedicated brush cutters, and we have some smaller machines that can use various cutting or mulching attachments,” explains Oliver.

With his fleet of Gyro-Trac equipment Oliver’s crews can be selective when removing vegetation, which means they can leave some areas or tress for wildlife, they can create riparian management zones around wetlands and creeks, and they can work in wetland areas because of the low ground pressure offered by the machines. “In some wetland areas, only certain types of machines are allowed to be used, including ours,” says Oliver. “The ground pressure is very low so our equipment doesn’t disturb the natural landscape. When a 160-pound human walks in these areas, the ground pressure is 6.2 pounds per square foot. The Gyro-Trac machine is half of that at 3.1 pounds per square foot.”

Targeting Weeds
Vegetation management isn’t always related to large trees and brush. At the City of Lakeport, which is in California’s wine country and situated on Clear Lake, Public Works Superintendent Doug Grider is dealing with smaller weeds that push their way through cracks in the pavement and other areas such as where the roadway butts up to the gutters.

For Grider, high tech has proven to be the answer as the city of 5,000 people has equipped the local street sweeping machines with WeedSeeker automatic spot spray systems from NTech Industries Inc. in Ukiah, CA. The patented WeedSeeker technology uses advanced optics and computer circuitry to sense if a weed is present. The sensor has a 12-inch-wide field of view, and when it detects a weed, it signals a spray nozzle, which then applies a predetermined amount of herbicide such as Roundup.

“The sensor detects the plant, and once the weed is dead, the equipment will no longer detect it,” explains Grider. “Because the spray nozzle only activates when the equipment detects live weeds, we are not spraying pavement, which makes this program very cost-effective.”

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The Lakeport sweepers are each equipped with two WeedSeeker systems on the rear of the sweeper. The street sweeper simply follows the usual route, and the WeedSeeker comes on when needed. “Like most rural areas, we don’t have the funds to do everything we would like to do when it comes to controlling weeds, so this is a very good way for us to control the weeds along the gutters and roadsides,” says Grider. “It is really simple to use, and the operator has a route map that identifies any properties where the owners don’t want us to spray. They control it from the cab of the sweeper and just turn off the sensors in these areas.”

For a small city like Lakeport, Grider says the technology makes economic sense. “By having the WeedSeekers on the sweepers, we are really doing two jobs at once, and that helps us out tremendously in terms of budgets,” he adds. “Before, we were using a truck with a hose running out of it, which meant the operator had to stop and get out of the truck to apply the herbicide. It was very time consuming. Now, everything is controlled from inside the truck. We are estimating the payback on the WeedSeeker equipment will be 18 to 24 months. After that, it is just cost savings.”

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