AP Texas News
Dec. 25, 2007, 11:56AM
Man uses tractor to crush cactus
By FRED AFFLERBACH Temple Daily Telegram
© 2007 The Associated Press
TEMPLE, Texas The prickly pear cactus has been a thorn in the cattleman's
side since the Mexican vaqueros began pushing their stock across the Rio Grande
well over two centuries ago.
This invasive species chokes out native grasses with its aggressive root system
that spreads horizontally, sending up new shoots. It sucks up rainwater before
the moisture can soak in, or run off and fill reservoirs needed for watering
stock. The noted author O. Henry called prickly pear a "demon plant"
because it could live without soil, or water, in a sparse landscape.
Ranchers have sprayed it with chemicals, scraped it with bulldozers, and in
times of drought used it for cattle feed by burning the spines with propane
torches.
Fast forward to the 21st century and meet the Kactus Krusher, aka Dave Gross,
riding a red 1954 Farmall tractor pulling an odd-looking train of cutting and
crushing implements pulverizing the cacti into green mush.
Gross says with the outer hide broken open, the moisture leaches from the large
leaves, or pads. Once the pads have completely dried out, they crunch under
your feet, like walking on potato chips, before they decompose into the soil.
Temple resident Don Ringler bought rural property infested with prickly pear
outside Salado several years ago. Gross treated about 80 acres that Ringler
said was so thick with prickly pear he couldn't walk through it. About two
years after Gross finished a series of treatments, Ringler said it was amazing
how both native plants and wildlife have thrived.
"It's not like traditional methods where you lose a lot of top soil,"
Ringler said. "He cuts them out at the roots and smushes them so they dry
out."
Bell County Agricultural Extension Agent Dirk Aaron said prickly pear is a big
problem in parts of western Bell County, where carrying capacity for cattle can
be as little as one head for 25 acres.
He says new chemicals are "less invasive" than the previous methods
of spraying diesel and other mixtures, and in particularly rough terrain
spraying may be more practical. But he said that from a pure land stewardship
aspect, crushing is a good choice.
"If you are looking for a non-chemical approach, this is better than
scraping them and piling them up," he said.
Gross says it takes at least two, preferably three treatments, several months
apart, to keep the prickly pear from coming back.
He has killed prickly pear on ranches from North Texas near the Red River, to
South Central Texas near the San Marcos River, from West Texas near Abilene, to
ranches here in Bell County.
Gross started crushing prickly pear several years ago when he met Gary Johnson
of McGregor. Johnson had patented a 500-pound steel plate called a Kactus
Kicker to be dragged behind a tractor. Gross took the simple technology with no
moving parts and expanded on it.
Today, they remain close, always looking for ways to improve the odd-looking
train of steel plates attached with chains and linked by a spider's web of
hydraulic hoses designed to lower and raise wheels to free the units from rocks
and stumps.
"Who would've ever figured you'd want retractable landing gear on a cactus
killing tool," Johnson said. "Without that, you have to stop, get
down and move things."
The train of implements begins with a shredder to mow down the cacti. Two or
more large steel plates that pulverize the pads follow. Gross makes two passes,
attacking the prickly pear from both directions. He also uses an arrangement
he calls it the delta formation to make a wide sweep up to 16 feet across.
Gross, 65, is a one-man operation, and he says he thrives working out in the
field with his "toys."
He often camps out on the ranches where he works, bringing everything he needs
to live remotely for several days at a time: tent, camp stove, barbecue pit and
portable shower.
Gross brings a spare tractor tire, hydraulic hoses, fittings and a welding
trailer to make onsite repairs.
"When you drag iron across rocks, the rocks win every time," Gross
said. "You have to be aware of that, carry enough spare parts and supplies
to take care of almost any situation. If you think it can't happen, it
will."
Gross, a former computer technician, said although he is a small business owner
with a Web site, he is happiest when he is out in the field.
"I wear a cotton facemask when I'm working, and it has two purposes:
First, to keep the needles out of my lungs, the second it keeps the landowner
from seeing me grinning because I'm having such a good time," Gross said.
" It took me till I was 60 to figure out what I want to do when I grew up
and this is it."