jimg
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2003
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Yes, or the 3pt mocos. I asked the Kuhn guy at Field Day and he seemed not too interested to sell one. He thought the trailer mower was the better product.
Yes, or the 3pt mocos. I asked the Kuhn guy at Field Day and he seemed not too interested to sell one. He thought the trailer mower was the better product.
Mark
I know...didnt make sense to me either. He did mention resale value but usually Im looking to ownership for the long term. By the time Im done w/ it Ive gotten my $$ worth. Think he was also concerned I didnt have 'enough tractor' to counter balance it....although my tractor was w/i the published rating.
Youre situation is a good bit like most of New England...much of the land has been split up into tiny fields that want smaller equipment and to get any sort of production you need to have several. Those several could be miles apart. If you wind up hauling equipment around youre going to need some high power organization to keep expenses to a min. or cultivate a market close to the fields. An alternative is to simply custom bale...which has its own set of problems.![]()
The maneuverability of the mo-co is almost all in the tractor driving it.
Small postage stamp farms and fields here in this part of Alaska, too. And narrow gravel roads (with mailboxes...).
Large farm in this area is 160 acres. Of course, lot's of trees and wet, swampy areas interspersed here and there that you have to work (mow) around. Housing development and folk's wanting to live outside of the city limits is the direction that things are goin' as well.
High volume, big production machine is not anything that fits the landscape or the reality of the type of hay, either. With only 1 cutting per season (8 out of 10 years) and only a ton/acre average yield; a 14' cutter is way more machine than is necessary (unless you do ALOT of custom work)!
Doesn't JD have hitch now that is also good to > 90deg turns too?