kreyszig
New member
Hi,
on my lot I have lots of bushes of prickly ash which is fairly hard wood that grows about 6" apart. I have some bushes such as the one in attachment where the diameter of each tree is about 3/4" and they are about 7-8' tall. I have other bushes where the trees are about 2" diameter. I am looking for the best solution to cut these down.
I currently have a clearing saw that I can use with these, but it is a very slow process, due to the density/number of trees to cut (100s per bush), and that I have about 20 acres where these bushes are starting to spread. I also have a heavy duty 6' finising mower (Farm King Y655) with a reinforced 7 Ga deck on my tractor that I can use to cut young bushes going reverse and very slowly. The mower I have is obviously not an attachment that was designed for this though. I did look at rotary cutters for my tractor (Bush Hog BH215, Land Pride RCF2060, Woods BB60X and BB60.30), but these use very thin steel (10-11 Ga with), with no rear reinforcement at all (the Woods models with either a tube or Z channel at the back are better than the others though), so it would get badly bent if I was backing into these 8' bushes with that. Also, although they have a 2" cutting capacity, I would guess these are more designed to cut a lonely 2" diameter tree than a bush full of 1" trees that are growing 6" apart. I did look at other rotary cutters, such as the BH315, Land Pride RCF2760 and Woods BB60.50. These have thicker steel, but they don't seem to be really designed to back into tall bushes either, and their rated minimum required PTO power is between 30-35 HP, which I was told is too high for my tractor (I was told I was risking damaging my tractor of the gear box/slip clutch was rated 100+ hp).
So I was wondering, is there a better solution for what I am trying to do?
Thank you!
on my lot I have lots of bushes of prickly ash which is fairly hard wood that grows about 6" apart. I have some bushes such as the one in attachment where the diameter of each tree is about 3/4" and they are about 7-8' tall. I have other bushes where the trees are about 2" diameter. I am looking for the best solution to cut these down.
I currently have a clearing saw that I can use with these, but it is a very slow process, due to the density/number of trees to cut (100s per bush), and that I have about 20 acres where these bushes are starting to spread. I also have a heavy duty 6' finising mower (Farm King Y655) with a reinforced 7 Ga deck on my tractor that I can use to cut young bushes going reverse and very slowly. The mower I have is obviously not an attachment that was designed for this though. I did look at rotary cutters for my tractor (Bush Hog BH215, Land Pride RCF2060, Woods BB60X and BB60.30), but these use very thin steel (10-11 Ga with), with no rear reinforcement at all (the Woods models with either a tube or Z channel at the back are better than the others though), so it would get badly bent if I was backing into these 8' bushes with that. Also, although they have a 2" cutting capacity, I would guess these are more designed to cut a lonely 2" diameter tree than a bush full of 1" trees that are growing 6" apart. I did look at other rotary cutters, such as the BH315, Land Pride RCF2760 and Woods BB60.50. These have thicker steel, but they don't seem to be really designed to back into tall bushes either, and their rated minimum required PTO power is between 30-35 HP, which I was told is too high for my tractor (I was told I was risking damaging my tractor of the gear box/slip clutch was rated 100+ hp).
So I was wondering, is there a better solution for what I am trying to do?
Thank you!