I went to the local diner where everybody knows everybody and started asking if anyone know of someone with a mulcher. One guy did and he gave me his contact info. As I recall I think he was out of Bartlesville. I don't know how far he is willing to travel for a job. He had two different sizes of machines. He charged by the day. $1650 for the small and $1850 for the bigger. I don't know if you have any experience with one of these machines, but they are pretty remarkable. I didn't even know they existed until about 3 years ago when ONG contracted one to clear their pipeline easement and one came through and cleared a strip in the field next to me. Once I had the money I called the guy and had him bring his big machine. Originally I was only thinking about a 100' strip cleared, but he had that much done before noon. I called the landowner and asked if he could keep on going. He hates red cedars and gave me his blessing to take out as many as I wanted, but leave the hardwoods standing. By the end of the day he had cleared a strip about 75 x 100 yds. It was my plan to keep this area brushhogged down, but the aftermath of the mulcher left so much ground up wood, I knew it would have to be cleared out someway. I found a guy with a skid steer that said he could scrape it all up for $40 an hour so I hired him. It was in the late spring and he couldn't get in there right away because the ground was so wet. While we were waiting for it to stop raining and dry up, I kept going in there with my little tractor and scraped up the debris into rows and then burned them. I did a couple hours every day or two and eventually cleared about 2/3 of the area. He came out finally and finished the rest of the field in a day. It would have taken him longer if he was going to have to hall the wood off, but we decided to just stack it in piles back in amongst the rest of the standing cedars. It was expensive, but I consider it money well spent. Here's how it looks now. Before, that wall of cedars you see in the back were right up against my fenceline. The one thing I wished I had payed more attention to was making him grind the stumps down level. Most still stick up 2-4 inches. It's a real bitch mowing over them and it feels like I'm riding a bull at the county fair. I have to keep my brush hog up high as possible to miss them.
Here's how it looks now
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In the background you can see in this pic one of the leftover piles. I had a landscaper out later after this had been done and he told me they had a machine that could have just pull the cedars out of the ground and wouldn't have left all the shreds, but then I would have had a field full of big holes that would have had to be filled and leveled which probably would have been more work in the long run. If your anywhere in NE OK, you can give him a call. His name is Jim Beam (for real) 918 636 1698.
Edit
I don't know if it was just a coincidence, but I found a nice batch morels in one corner of the field. I'm hoping they like the place and will spread out even more next year.