HillCountry: We had a lot of rain all week but I was able to get the tractor and implements out to the property today. Last weekend and yesterday, I cut all of the trees for the driveway and left the last 3' - 4' of trunk to make it easier to remove the root ball. So today I had to remove the remnants of trees the first 150' of driveway to get to a semi-usable point off the side of the drive to make an area 25' long and 25' deep to place the 4 x 4s I use to set my implements on and have a combined area in conjunction with the 15' wide driveway area so I can more easily change implements.
This area was full of trees, as the whole property is and one does not walk on the ground here, one just walks on top of rocks. It is not even possible to drive a stake into the ground as there are just rocks on top of rocks. And there is very little room to maneuver a 21' long tractor and it is a constant- move fwd a few feet, turn the wheel and backup a few feet, etc., etc, all day long. And since I was doing all of this maneuvering in a relatively small area, I made a lot of large ruts- probably axle deep, that I also had to maneuver around and this constantly changed the angle of the rock bucket as I was trying to scoop up the rocks and level the dirt.
I was in constant 4WD and rear differential lock most of the day with multiple tires spinning most of the time. But I finally got the trees cleared out, this part relatively level (on an original 10 - 15 degree uphill slant) and the rocks interfering with leveling dumped farther back, outside the area I cleared for implement storage. I am telling you all of this so maybe you can get a mental picture of what I had to deal with.
My original premise held true, except that I removed all of the rocks- some 24" - 32" diameter that had to be dug out, with the 48" Wild Kat rock grapple and only experimented with the ROBB vs. using each 50-50, as originally planned. Once I am able to get back to doing the length of the driveway, I feel I will still use the ROBB as originally planned with the scarifiers several inches under the surface to turn the larger rocks upright and then either pick them up with the rock bucket and/or maybe use the ROBB's blade to pull the surfaced rocks to one side and then maybe use a bucket to scoop them up. My goal is not to remove all of the rocks, but to level the surface so I can add gravel for the driveway surface. It would be impossible to remove all of the rocks as I am convinced a glacier much have ended its travel right at the front half of my property.
It will still require some experimenting, but at this point I think my original plans are still relatively intact. And if I do run into some boulders I can't handle, I will just work around it/them until I get done and will have a mini-x come out and dig them up for me. If memory servers correctly, last year I paid $400 for four hours with each additional hour at $65 or so. I believe this will be my least expensive, most expedient option.
Also, the Wild Kat 48" rock bucket worked admirably, with nothing bent and no indications it will not last for a very long time in my very difficult environment. Most of time I was using it as a digging bucket, sometimes with it at a 30 degree to 45 degree angle, with the front wheels raised off the ground and driving forward with the tractor jumping around a bit as it gained and lost traction and as the bucket skidded off a large rock buried deeper into the ground and then grabbed into dirt or other rocks.
This area was full of trees, as the whole property is and one does not walk on the ground here, one just walks on top of rocks. It is not even possible to drive a stake into the ground as there are just rocks on top of rocks. And there is very little room to maneuver a 21' long tractor and it is a constant- move fwd a few feet, turn the wheel and backup a few feet, etc., etc, all day long. And since I was doing all of this maneuvering in a relatively small area, I made a lot of large ruts- probably axle deep, that I also had to maneuver around and this constantly changed the angle of the rock bucket as I was trying to scoop up the rocks and level the dirt.
I was in constant 4WD and rear differential lock most of the day with multiple tires spinning most of the time. But I finally got the trees cleared out, this part relatively level (on an original 10 - 15 degree uphill slant) and the rocks interfering with leveling dumped farther back, outside the area I cleared for implement storage. I am telling you all of this so maybe you can get a mental picture of what I had to deal with.
My original premise held true, except that I removed all of the rocks- some 24" - 32" diameter that had to be dug out, with the 48" Wild Kat rock grapple and only experimented with the ROBB vs. using each 50-50, as originally planned. Once I am able to get back to doing the length of the driveway, I feel I will still use the ROBB as originally planned with the scarifiers several inches under the surface to turn the larger rocks upright and then either pick them up with the rock bucket and/or maybe use the ROBB's blade to pull the surfaced rocks to one side and then maybe use a bucket to scoop them up. My goal is not to remove all of the rocks, but to level the surface so I can add gravel for the driveway surface. It would be impossible to remove all of the rocks as I am convinced a glacier much have ended its travel right at the front half of my property.
It will still require some experimenting, but at this point I think my original plans are still relatively intact. And if I do run into some boulders I can't handle, I will just work around it/them until I get done and will have a mini-x come out and dig them up for me. If memory servers correctly, last year I paid $400 for four hours with each additional hour at $65 or so. I believe this will be my least expensive, most expedient option.
Also, the Wild Kat 48" rock bucket worked admirably, with nothing bent and no indications it will not last for a very long time in my very difficult environment. Most of time I was using it as a digging bucket, sometimes with it at a 30 degree to 45 degree angle, with the front wheels raised off the ground and driving forward with the tractor jumping around a bit as it gained and lost traction and as the bucket skidded off a large rock buried deeper into the ground and then grabbed into dirt or other rocks.