I have only had to move one pile with a shovel. Nothing except possibly a walk behind skid steer would have worked. I doubt even that would have. I have done plenty of things a smaller tractor couldn't have.
Like I you seem to have a good mix of equipment/attachements and so forth.
I'm going on 62, but in my younger days I tackled all too much with hand tools, digging Prying Lugging, Splittng, tilling, pounding and chopping, etc I did some damage, which has caught up to me. I'm trying to recover to the extent i can still have some fun, but those Dbl diamonds are out this winter, I need more time in gym.
From here on in I want to be like a politican, i.e. use a shovel for cermonial occasions and photo ops.
With our little farm, I still get exercise, except with an office jov vs lanscaping aand construction, i'm not getting enough.
Ranking my equipment:
L39 Used oftem, Abosultely Essential. This place simple would not function for long without it. A relatively small, heavy, strudy, versitale ,strong machine. Things would go to heck and it would be a real struggle.
RTV 900 Really Very handy on almost a daily basis. A real labor savor haauling and getting around, towing, dumping, etc
Max28 Very handy for the little tractor jobs, used often, a real back asver, big enough where a sub compact would fail but small enough to do sub compact work, large enought to do some stuff you think you need a std size CUT for. Max 28 handles regular cat 1 implements better than expected.
PC75UU2 excavator. Very handy, but seldom used anymore, (Approx +30 hrs year, vs +500 Hrs when first bought. When you need something that can lift, doze, grade, Log, dig as strong and fasster better than a full size construction TLB, this thing is handy.) I was killing the
L39. It can do projects better suited to a 12T excavator, is manuvarble in the woods., and as long as you decide that 100 year old tree should go on living, is all I need for firewood and land clearing.
Now that the farm is established , it is not necessary, but I'd want too much money to let it go. (PM me an offer to see if I'm right!)
I have a thread going back 10 years when we bought this pile of ridge, ledge and woods that is now our home and farm.