Mowing Ditch Banks

   / Mowing Ditch Banks #1  

PHPaul

Platinum Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2011
Messages
763
Location
Downeast Maine
Tractor
Kubota B2650 with cab, Pasquali 986
ditch.jpg


I have a small drainage ditch that cuts right through my front lawn. It's a county/state drain and moving/modifying it is not an option. It's about 6-8 feet wide at the top and perhaps 3 feet deep.

It looks like crap because it's full of weeds, cattails, multiflora rose and baby alders. At my age, it's FAR too much work to try to keep it cleaned out with a weed whacker so I just live with it.

It wouldn't be necessary to mow all the way down the banks, in fact just a "crew cut" to keep the weeds even with the top of the ditch/lawn would be satisfactory.

It seems to me that the ideal solution would be a small sicklebar mower that allows the bar to work somewhat below horizontal. Due to the placement of the house (the ditch runs within a few feet of one corner of the foundation) and various trees and shrubs, mowing with my B2650 is not an option. The best solution would be something that could be made to work with my LX178 Deere lawn tractor.

Alternatively, a really powerful tractor mounted/driven string trimmer might work.

Cost is a factor, I'd spend $500 or so for a good solution. Maybe more for something really elegant and PROVEN to work.

Looking for suggestions, experience, pictures, sources...whatever input might lead to a solution.
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks #2  
Get a goat, or maybe just borrow one from a neighbor. Fix up one of those cables with a sliding leash so it would allow the goat to walk the length of the ditch, and have enough slack so it could cover both sides of the ditch. I wouldn't advocate keeping the goat tied up there all the time, maybe build a small fenced in area to keep the goat most of the time, and when the ditch needed mowing, just move him over to it.
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks #3  
Pull an old push-mower on an offset hitch with your tractor of choice?
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks #4  
I use a cheapy push mower I found in a pawn shop for the ditch in front of my house. My ditch sounds about the same as yours and has the occasional rock sticking out the bank. Used to do it with a weed wacker, but dang.... that was hard on my back and shoulders and took close to an hour for 180ft of ditch. Push mower takes about ten minutes a side :)
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Get a goat, or maybe just borrow one from a neighbor. Fix up one of those cables with a sliding leash so it would allow the goat to walk the length of the ditch, and have enough slack so it could cover both sides of the ditch. I wouldn't advocate keeping the goat tied up there all the time, maybe build a small fenced in area to keep the goat most of the time, and when the ditch needed mowing, just move him over to it.

1. Ain't gonna be no freakin' goats on this ranch. BTDT. :laughing:

2. I got sheep and they can't keep up with the part of it that IS fenced in.
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks
  • Thread Starter
#6  
Pull an old push-mower on an offset hitch with your tractor of choice?

Something along these lines is perking in the back of my mind now. I'm thinking home-built string trimmer on an articulated arm and powered by the electric clutch on my LX178. That 15hp Kawasaki oughta make a heckuva string trimmer!

Haven't gone out in the garage and contemplated things yet, but I sorta envision dropping the mower deck off and mounting the offset trimmer on the right side of the tractor. I'd only need to do that 2-3 times a year.
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks #7  
Why couldn't you use a bush hog/rotary cutter. A 4ft bush hog would reach about 4 to 5 foot into your ditch.
You would have to back into the brush, but you would only have to do it maybe 3 times a season.
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks #8  
Good trimmer might take 20 mins.
 
   / Mowing Ditch Banks
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Why couldn't you use a bush hog/rotary cutter. A 4ft bush hog would reach about 4 to 5 foot into your ditch.
You would have to back into the brush, but you would only have to do it maybe 3 times a season.

I do that on the back 3/4ths of it that runs through the pastures. Lack of maneuvering room and tearing up the lawn prevents that on the front part tho.
 
 
 
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