BrokeFarmerJohn
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2016
- Messages
- 2,233
- Location
- Columbus Ohio
- Tractor
- 2017 Mahindra 5555, John Blue G-1000, Massey Ferguson 98, John Deere GP
My siblings and I have 150 acres and we do have a Ford 4630 tractor 2wd at the farm. I do all of my bush hogging with that tractor their. I'm really looking for a 4wd that I can create food plots with and actually make shooting lanes when a pine plantation is thinned. Mostly I will hire a dozer to come in and knock out all of the stumps and then use a tractor to break up the ground. Most of all of my implements are cat 2. We have a 6' disk and I want to get a 6' bush hog brand bush hog. I don't think I will ever run a tiller because of the stumps and rocks.
I really thought about getting a BX at one time but really didn't think I could get much of a bush hog behind it. In all fairness the BX would be used a lot more around my home and my mothers home. You think I could take land that has never seen a plow and turn it up to plant a food plot with a BX tractor. The more I think about it the more it becomes practical to own a BX
You could get a 4ft hog behind a BX, you can plough virgin ground with it but will have clearance issues at times.
I'm not sure if a BX could pull a 6ft disk or not, its prob best to use 4ft implements with a subcompact. I'm not sure if I would go that small on a tractor.
How big are your plots?
For a 6ft hog your looking more into the larger frame size tractors and more around the lower 30s HP.
I would order the tractor with Titan Multi Trac turfs and set the wheels out as wide as possible if your running on hills, unless the ground is really rocky you won't need R4s, you can go R1s if your not running on turf or road. R1W if it's muddy. Turfs are better in the snow, is comparable to R4s in mud, ride smoother and is a wider footprint.