Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320

   / Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320 #11  
Heck, if you want to smooth out an established lawn, I'd simply top dress the low spots with a mix of pete moss and top soil. You can add 1/2" a few times a year until you're happy with the results.
 
   / Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320
  • Thread Starter
#12  
Hello John Thomas,

Dont waste your money John Thomas!

Fortunately for you Steve Barlow is right on the
money with this attachment!!!!

I can tell you from experience the mechanics of
this thing will only bounce as it tries to dig in simply
from the attempt to drag over the sod in any case.

The grass roots of the sod are what the unit is
attempting to rip through and even weed sod will
prevent this from happening and heavy clay will
make it worse.


If you want to level your lawn and do it the right
way and purchase the smallest Sicma or other
brand Italian stone burrier from Ken Sweet.

A stone burier is roto tiller with hardened vertical tines
that break the rock as it tills and buries the rock and
heavy clods of dirt at the bottom of the tilling depth
and covers it with soil all at the same time.

Further the stone burier can be used in a garden just
like a tiller as it has an open cage roller to flatten and
pack the soil down lightly for planting(which is exacty
what you want to make new sod with heavy growth.


A 36-48 inch stone burrier will do this for you
with no questions asked.

Stone buriers are used to make new lawns and till
grapevine rows in steep and flat land vineyards to
keep the weeds down and break up rocks
that are pushed up by frost heaving.


If you buy a stone burrier you will have a forever
implement that you can use to make gardens and
flower beds as well.


I Do not know the first thing about these folks but
seeing the "You tube Video" with him in the skid steer loader
promoting his grapple attachment and moving the oversized log and falling forward into the center of his drainage ditch in "What not to do with your skid steer loader" which was staged obviously as the extended boom and LARGE log fell directly into the center of the ditch-lucky for him the log was long and he avoided a side tip over when it rolled into the center of the ditch.
_________________________________________________________________
Once you go flail you never go back:thumbsup::licking::drool:
Pronovost or not at all!!!:thumbsup::licking::drool:
Where have you been Leonz?:confused: I've missed your posts or book length posts cut and pasted about the flail mower being the answer to every and I mean every need. :confused2:You been over at the other forums or sick? Your surely not leaving the flail mower is the answer for every need and going to this stone burrier thing, are you? Is this stone burrier under $1000 as I asked for no solutions over $1000? Never heard of a stone burrier but I'll research it. Have you quit selling flail mowers or stopped getting your commission/dividend for each one sold?:laughing:

Heck, if you want to smooth out an established lawn, I'd simply top dress the low spots with a mix of pete moss and top soil. You can add 1/2" a few times a year until you're happy with the results.
With the size of my yard and the size of some of the dips this probably wouldn't cost over $20,000.:) I've done a few loads of topsoil and the old saying of "cheap as dirt" no longer applies because dirt is no longer cheap. Hundreds of dollars a truckload and once it's spread out you wonder where it went. But is a good plan for a rich man.:)
 
   / Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Hello John Thomas,

Dont waste your money John Thomas!

Fortunately for you Steve Barlow is right on the
money with this attachment!!!!

I can tell you from experience the mechanics of
this thing will only bounce as it tries to dig in simply
from the attempt to drag over the sod in any case.

The grass roots of the sod are what the unit is
attempting to rip through and even weed sod will
prevent this from happening and heavy clay will
make it worse.


If you want to level your lawn and do it the right
way and purchase the smallest Sicma or other
brand Italian stone burrier from Ken Sweet.

A stone burier is roto tiller with hardened vertical tines
that break the rock as it tills and buries the rock and
heavy clods of dirt at the bottom of the tilling depth
and covers it with soil all at the same time.

Further the stone burier can be used in a garden just
like a tiller as it has an open cage roller to flatten and
pack the soil down lightly for planting(which is exacty
what you want to make new sod with heavy growth.


A 36-48 inch stone burrier will do this for you
with no questions asked.

Stone buriers are used to make new lawns and till
grapevine rows in steep and flat land vineyards to
keep the weeds down and break up rocks
that are pushed up by frost heaving.


If you buy a stone burrier you will have a forever
implement that you can use to make gardens and
flower beds as well.


I Do not know the first thing about these folks but
seeing the "You tube Video" with him in the skid steer loader
promoting his grapple attachment and moving the oversized log and falling forward into the center of his drainage ditch in "What not to do with your skid steer loader" which was staged obviously as the extended boom and LARGE log fell directly into the center of the ditch-lucky for him the log was long and he avoided a side tip over when it rolled into the center of the ditch.
_________________________________________________________________
Once you go flail you never go back:thumbsup::licking::drool:
Pronovost or not at all!!!:thumbsup::licking::drool:
Leonz, Leonz, Leonz. Here's a video about a stone burrier. [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qamqgpY4Pu8&feature=related]stone burier rotovator - YouTube[/ame]
again you've come up with an extremely expensive off the wall answer for fixing a one time need at a reasonable price. This is as bad as you recommending a flail mower for every mowing need with the flail mower costing two to thee times what any other mower costs.You actually think this stone burrier or any stone burrier would be under $1000???:confused:
 
   / Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320 #14  
I see that the current standing grass will be a problem. Looks like I'm back to the Boxblade to dig and level it, the tiller to pulverize it and then the RatchetRake to pull out the grass and then the Ferguson Overseeder to seed it. See, that's a lot of implements, which I have, to do a simple job that one piece of equipment should do, for under $1000.:)
Thanks each one of you for your input.:thumbsup:

I have put in several new gardens where grass existed. My tiller set to 2 inches tilling depth roots out the grass. The ratchet rake is an excellent tool (or FEL) to then push the grass out of the garden area. The last 65 by 65 area that I did produced 12 yards of old grass. The one piece equipment to do what you want to do is a pipe dream considering the amount of grass that will be displaced. It takes quite a bit of effort just to get the old grass out of the way.

Afterwards if you want a really level yard then a land plane is my tool of choice. I go behind bulk head builders with my land plane to level yards just prior to the homeowner laying sod. Levels way better than a box blade.

Tractor 3 Point Hitch Model LGB Utility Grader, Leveling Box with Angled Blades

Their $1k model is pricey. My 5' Armstrong Ag was only $650. I maintain a large parking lot with mine. After I drag it I can drive the tractor full tilt over it just like I was on pavement with a smooth ride. If you want smooth then land plane it.
 
   / Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320 #15  
Where have you been Leonz?:confused: I've missed your posts or book length posts cut and pasted about the flail mower being the answer to every and I mean every need. :confused2:You been over at the other forums or sick? Your surely not leaving the flail mower is the answer for every need and going to this stone burrier thing, are you? Is this stone burrier under $1000 as I asked for no solutions over $1000? Never heard of a stone burrier but I'll research it. Have you quit selling flail mowers or stopped getting your commission/dividend for each one sold?:laughing:


With the size of my yard and the size of some of the dips this probably wouldn't cost over $20,000.:) I've done a few loads of topsoil and the old saying of "cheap as dirt" no longer applies because dirt is no longer cheap. Hundreds of dollars a truckload and once it's spread out you wonder where it went. But is a good plan for a rich man.:)





I do not know what stone burriers retail for theses days but I can find out John Thomas.

I personally prefer flailmowers for a number of reasons pedestrian safety being the primary reason.

I do not sell flailmowers.

No the stone burrier is not the answer fror everyone and everything I simply suggested it because it does a far superior job than a forward drive standard rototiller.

The stone burrier is not an off the wall answer, a lot of GOOD landscapers use them with surestand grass seeders to make new lawns and install new lawn on old turf without straw and they are used extensively for excavation work repair on pipeline trench lines as it eliminates rocks as an issue when reseeding is done.


The only other option you really have is using your rototiller and borrowing a manure spreader to throw sand across the whole place and then level it again with your rototiller OR purchase a spinner spreader from tractor supply and fill it with sand-but borrowing a beater type manure spreader to fo the job would be faster and buying the sand you need would only be about four dollars a ton from a gravel pit plus freight from the pit.
 
   / Everything Attachments Yard Pulverizer 48" or 60" with B2320 #16  
If you run a device that knocks off the high spots and moves that loose dirt into the low spots now you have a level 3 acres. It rains and the loose dirt settles but the high area you scraped the top off is still compacted firm dirt. Even compacting the low spots will probably not be as compacted as the undisturbed high spots. I suspect if youget your property even as possible, it will be fullof ruts after a summer of rain. I have some ditches in my yard from my geothermal trenches. I scooped up the sod once and placed some dirt and replaced the sod. It has settled again 10 years later where I either need to scrape up the sod or just filter some dirt and compost and let the bermuda grow on top of the mix.

My land has a 1-2% slope front to back. If I blast through one section of the property with the truck I get bucked. My old truck had half the mass, a shorter wheelbase, and stiffer springs and it would really buck me. I leave those eroded terraces as I hope they are slowing down erosion. I probably need to add terraces on some other parts of the property to keep the soil in place.

I have bought dirt cheap dirt at $125 for a tandum dump truck load. That load did not go very far.

So here is an idea. Get someone with a bulldozer or a loader to come out and scratch everything up. Make sure he has built golf courses before so he knows how to do it and leave you with an even enough field that you can follow up with a pulverizer to even things up even more and make for a good seed bed. He can dig those high spots deeper so they are not going to stay as high spots. Remember if your propery has any slope you need to control that runoff. Of course if you get the three foot wide rolls of sod you can cover that prepared field quickly and your erosion problems are minimized assuming that your sod is putting down roots right now. I would guess you might be able to do that for less than $50k for 3 acres. You did request ideas that would let you do things in $1k increments? Maybe get him to deliver the loader and run it one day for $1k. Pay him. Next day get him to run it for a longer day and pay him $1k. Another day of $1k. Go to the implement store one day and get a pullverizer for $1k. I made my own from scrap metal and a four pillow block bearings. Well technically not all scrap metal but still stuff in a friend's shop. Buy some seed another day and spread by a small push spreader. Rye seed was $17 a 50# bag from the farmer down the street. Probably need to spread summer grass seed in May but that seed may cost some money. Well you were looking for ideas about how to do an expensive project for cheap. ;-)
 

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