[QUOTE 5339938, member: 9609"]the general rotation of the crops should allow the farmer to cut probably 2 out of every three years. Its usually Rape following winter barley that's in before Sept. that will get in the way of cutting the hedges on the field side.......[/QUOTE]
Winter wheat and barley are both generally planted before September around here. And judging by the field we live in, there is no crop rotation at all. At least, not one dictated by agricultural requirements. We've had rape, wheat, wheat, barley, and next year will be barley, in the 4 years we've lived here. Barley, by the way, is a beautiful crop. They use a really old variety (it's sold for specialist brewing) which produces quite an uneven crop, with plant heights varying by up to 18 inches or so. The delicate, hairy heads wave around delightfully in a breeze, and the stubble is soft when its been cut. It also seems to need about half the amount of spraying that wheat requires.
Back to the hedging thing.........the farmer is very cogniscant of compressing the soil, and a tractor going around the perimeter of a field 3 or 4 times does a lot of soil compression. So in normal weather, with some dampness in the soil, they won't do the hedges even if they could fit it in with the harvest/ drilling. He told me that he reckons that they'll get the chance to do the hedges about one year in 10 under this relatively new regime, and it's one of the reasons he voted for Brexit.