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Alfalfa drawingForage Facts

This Old Hayfield:
A Fact Sheet on Hayfield Renovation
By Rick Kersbergen, Extension educator, University of Maine Cooperative Extension

University of Maine Cooperative Extension
Bulletin #2491 

Many landowners want to bring abandoned or neglected hay fields back into production for quality hay or pasture. Other landowners just want to maintain the fields with desirable grasses and open spaces. To do either takes time and attention. This fact sheet briefly describes how to renovate and restore pasture lands.

If you have time, and the field is smooth enough for your purposes, regular mowing (three times per season) plus appropriate fertilizer and lime additions will produce a good field in three to four years.

The renovation process depends on many factors: site characteristics, goals for the site and resources available. To better understand what needs to be done to renovate a hayfield, let’s review what happens to neglected land.

Most hayfields are perennial sods consisting of clovers (red and white) and grasses (bluegrass, orchard grass, quackgrass and timothy). Over time (without mowing) woody species begin to invade (alders, birches and poplars are common). Bluegrass begins to dominate all other species. Many perennial weeds also become prevalent, including milkweed, bedstraw, dandelions and red sorrel. Without additions of limestone, soils in neglected fields become more acidic. This favors numerous weed populations, including bedstraw. Frost action may also begin to bring large rocks to the surface.

What happens when fields are neglectedTo begin the renovation process, ask yourself the following questions:

Here are the first steps in the renovation process:

If you have time, and the field is smooth enough for your purposes, regular mowing (three times per season) plus appropriate fertilizer and lime additions will produce a good field in three to four years. Regular mowing will help improve the species composition and allow various clover species to come back into the field. If you want to introduce desirable species into the field, think about frost seeding and no-till seeding. (Cooperative Extension educators and specialists can offer advice to make either option successful.)

Steps to Renovate an Old Hayfield

1. Assess the condition of the field, your goals and your resources.
2. Get a soil test.
3. Mow field with a rotary mower.
4. Lime and fertilize.
5. Remove rocks and stumps.
6. Till (if necessary) and seed.

If the field is rough and includes stumps and large rocks, tillage operations will be necessary. This can be expensive.

Large bulldozers with rock rakes can remove large rocks and stumps without removing too much soil. Often, these rocks and stumps are then buried in the field or left in a windrow to further decompose and be removed later.

Other tillage operations will be necessary to prepare the field for seeding. If liming is needed, it should be done before the final tillage operations occur. Commercial wood ash can also be used as a liming agent. Plowing, harrowing and additional rock picking will be necessary before seeding.

Seedbeds should be firm and clean of debris. Seeding in Maine should be done either in May or during the first three weeks of August. These time periods are critical for good germination and weed control, and to allow establishment before winter. It is important to have good seed bed and seed placement, so drill or brillion type seeders are recommended.

If tillage is the option you choose, here are some average custom rates (based on average costs in 2001):


For more information, contact your University of Maine Cooperative Extension county office.

See the University of Maine Cooperative Extension Online Publications Catalog for related information. 

Published and distributed in furtherance of Acts of Congress of May 8 and June 30, 1914, by the University of Maine Cooperative Extension, the Land Grant University of the state of Maine and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperating. Cooperative Extension and other agencies of the U.S.D.A. provide equal opportunities in programs and employment.

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