JDTank
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2010
- Messages
- 693
Good day all.
I am completely stumped between 2 candidates, a 2520, or a 3520 John Deere. Here is my property situation.
The property is 5 acres, but not all of those need to be maintained. We have a small 4 stall barn, riding arena, 3 paddocks, and a field for the horses using about half of this space. In this area, all the tractor needs to be used for is spreading pole shavings on the ground, cutting about 1 acre of grass with a rotary mower, and finish mowing about a quarter acre of grass.
The other half of the property, about 2 to 2.5 acres I am guessing, is where the house is. Finished grass mowing would be about 1 to 1.5 acres by the house. There is a small garden that needs tilling, maybe 50 feet by 75 feet.
Mostly I am trying to get a machine that will mow with a mid mount mower without getting to heavy. I live in British Columbia, a place known for one thing, rain. In the winter time, we don't see snow (in the lower mainland) just tons and tons of rain. For half the year, the ground here is very soft, and your feet sink 2 inches in the grass, nevermind a machine.
My concerns with the 2520 is this. I have a lot of brush to clean up in the future, we have a lot of trees that need trimming about twice a year. When we do trim, we are left with big piles of branches. I would love to clean these up with a grapple instead of by hand. The 2520 seems like to small of a machine to operate any kind of grapple with. Is this the case? Also, the other downside is, manure. Every 4 or 5 months we have a 4 foot high manure pile that needs to be moved. Obviously it is heavy, and I am not sure the 2520 is up to the task of tackling manure.
Also, how strong is the backhoe on the 2520? I do have some stumps that need to be removed, just small stumps, maybe 4 or 5 inches in diameter. Is the backhoe easy to remove so you can switch from a 3pt implement to the backhoe easily?
All in all, I only have about 3 acres I really need to worry about, and once the bigger projects are done, it will just be maintaining the property.
Thank you.
I am completely stumped between 2 candidates, a 2520, or a 3520 John Deere. Here is my property situation.
The property is 5 acres, but not all of those need to be maintained. We have a small 4 stall barn, riding arena, 3 paddocks, and a field for the horses using about half of this space. In this area, all the tractor needs to be used for is spreading pole shavings on the ground, cutting about 1 acre of grass with a rotary mower, and finish mowing about a quarter acre of grass.
The other half of the property, about 2 to 2.5 acres I am guessing, is where the house is. Finished grass mowing would be about 1 to 1.5 acres by the house. There is a small garden that needs tilling, maybe 50 feet by 75 feet.
Mostly I am trying to get a machine that will mow with a mid mount mower without getting to heavy. I live in British Columbia, a place known for one thing, rain. In the winter time, we don't see snow (in the lower mainland) just tons and tons of rain. For half the year, the ground here is very soft, and your feet sink 2 inches in the grass, nevermind a machine.
My concerns with the 2520 is this. I have a lot of brush to clean up in the future, we have a lot of trees that need trimming about twice a year. When we do trim, we are left with big piles of branches. I would love to clean these up with a grapple instead of by hand. The 2520 seems like to small of a machine to operate any kind of grapple with. Is this the case? Also, the other downside is, manure. Every 4 or 5 months we have a 4 foot high manure pile that needs to be moved. Obviously it is heavy, and I am not sure the 2520 is up to the task of tackling manure.
Also, how strong is the backhoe on the 2520? I do have some stumps that need to be removed, just small stumps, maybe 4 or 5 inches in diameter. Is the backhoe easy to remove so you can switch from a 3pt implement to the backhoe easily?
All in all, I only have about 3 acres I really need to worry about, and once the bigger projects are done, it will just be maintaining the property.
Thank you.