Anyone run a rockbucket on 2320/ 2520 Deere or Kubota equivalent or are they even capable of handling one? Are there better ways with dealing with rocks? ....... in my neck of the woods they seem to grow better than just about anything else
. Hope to have my first compact tractor next year and this info would be helpful.
I live at what was once the bottom of Glacial Lake Missoula and our ranch is loaded with great topsoil that it studded with rock fragments from the size of a Volkswagen on down. These fragments were torn from the Mission mountains by huge glciers during ancient ice ages and were floated out over the lake when these glaciers "calved" and were deposited by melting or by the repeated draining of the lake during the cataclysmic floods that formed the chaneled scablands of Eastern Washington.
The picture below gives you an idea of the medium size rocks we have to deal with. This one is too big for the trackhoe to pick up so a hole was dug that would put the upper surface of this rock three feet below grade and then it was pushed into the hole. Not easily seen in this picture is the the small rock fragments, 10 inches or less. Anything less than about 3-4 inches we don't deal with on the large scale. These small rock fragments are generally hand picked and removed in gardens and flower beds but in the pasteiures 3-4 inch rocks are rolled down after seeding.
We are reclaiming an old pond, ~100 ft in diameter, and if were not covered by 5-6 inches of fresh snow I'd show the rocks we have there. After disking the area three times, I handpicked the 1 foot to 2-1/2 ft rocks and carried them to the ditch with the loader, one of our rock "storage" locations. Next, I used our Ferguson TO-30 and a 5 ft landscape rake (that I reinforced!) and windrowed the rocks. I only broke three tine bolts! (IF I had a rock bucket, this is when I would use it to scoop the windrows to remove the rocks. They are not designed to grub rocks out of the ground.) I will then use the rake to make small piles of thes windrows that I can scoop up with a loader bucket. we will then seed the area, put hot wire fence around it to keep the cows out and have a neighbor roll the remaining rocks down.
Some folks use rock pickers to get these smaller rocks picked but we can't justify the expense of this piece of equipment. We have resisted "farming up " some of our pastures because of these rock issues. We are going to try frost seeding and some other techniques to improve the pastures, taking more time and using less $'s.
I don' have any idea of your rock problems or how you intend to use a rock bucket, Certainly one would be handy on our place but were looking at close to $2000 plus shpg for a 7 footer with 3 inch spacing and it's just not in the budget.I thought about making a "screen to sift rocks out and that might be a possibility but it would probably cost as much as rock bucket just for the steel.
I hope this give you some ideas for how you might deal with your rock problems