Fun with Stumps

   / Fun with Stumps #1  

Haff

Member
Joined
Jan 29, 2020
Messages
33
Tractor
Kubota B2601
My b2601 was delivered today. The wait was finally over. Which meant I now need to learn how to use this thing. I'v never owned a tractor before and the last equipment with hydraulics I used was driving forklift 20 years ago.

I moved a little dirt and gravel around to practice the FEL a bit. No issues there, everything felt good and obvious. So now I needed backhoe practice. I started by removing a 10 inch stump. I think it took all of 12 minutes. Awesome, felt great. So I moved to the next stump behind it. A 30 inch red oak stump. I spent about 2 hours on it. I have dug around it down to a good depth breaking every root I can find, but it wont budge. Which means it must have some beefy root(s) going straight down. I'll spend some more time on it tomorrow.

I was careful to frequently change the engine RPMs so it didnt sit at the same place for too long during the early hours on the motor.

Both the front and the hoe buckets have signs of use. There is dirt on various parts of the tractor in general. All in all, a good day.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #2  
Good to hear. That forklift training will go a long way to operating your tractor/FEL/backhoe in a safe manner.

Low & slow + take your time.

Oh, and don't get 'cocky'! :)
 
   / Fun with Stumps #3  
A 30” red oak stump probably weighs 3 tons maybe more being dug with such a little backhoe. I doubt the backhoe will ever drag it out even if every root was cut.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #4  
A 30” red oak stump probably weighs 3 tons maybe more being dug with such a little backhoe. I doubt the backhoe will ever drag it out even if every root was cut.

That's right. I wouldn't attack a 30" red oak stump with my big machine, and it can lift 8000 lbs. 4570 Man is saying the same. Stumps can beat a good machine to death. The stress is all wrong for the hoe, and you can never get to the biggest center roots that go straight down anyway. Nor can your machine safely lift that root ball up even if you could get down there to cut the center roots. It's a trap; don't go there.

Work within the machine's capabilities. Do what it can do easily, and don't be beating it up. Stumps aren't worth it. You'll be money ahead to dig a foot or two deep area all around the stump and then cut the stump off horizontally below ground level with a big chain saw. Then fill in the hole with high dollar $$ potting soil. Last step is to unbolt the bar and chain that are now ruined by the dirt and pitch them in the trash.....maybe pitch the saw in there too. But save the slab to make a table top.

Wipe off your hands and smile because the stump is now invisible and you probably just came out money ahead.
rScotty
 
   / Fun with Stumps #5  
That's right. I wouldn't attack a 30" red oak stump with my big machine, and it can lift 8000 lbs. 4570 Man is saying the same. Stumps can beat a good machine to death. The stress is all wrong for the hoe, and you can never get to the biggest center roots that go straight down anyway. Nor can your machine safely lift that root ball up even if you could get down there to cut the center roots. It's a trap; don't go there.

Work within the machine's capabilities. Do what it can do easily, and don't be beating it up. Stumps aren't worth it. You'll be money ahead to dig a foot or two deep area all around the stump and then cut the stump off horizontally below ground level with a big chain saw. Then fill in the hole with high dollar $$ potting soil. Last step is to unbolt the bar and chain that are now ruined by the dirt and pitch them in the trash.....maybe pitch the saw in there too. But save the slab to make a table top.

Wipe off your hands and smile because the stump is now invisible and you probably just came out money ahead.
rScotty

This stump isn’t even 30 inches and I had to make a team effort with the 19,000 pound trackhoe and my m59 because neither one could pick it up by themselves. I didn’t care to dig stumps with my 310. but I won’t dig big ones with the M59.
 

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   / Fun with Stumps
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#6  
Here I was thinking I was just being too gentle with my new machine and tomorrow I could give it a little more oomph. But now I am getting a clear message that it likely isnt a good plan to try. Thanks.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #7  
I bought a DR stump grinder for about $2,000 7-8 years ago to tackle the stumps. It grinds them 6" below ground level, the rest will eventually rot away.
 
   / Fun with Stumps #8  
Glad your new B2601 performing well and your not shy on putting it to work. :thumbsup: ...we all like pics. :)
 
   / Fun with Stumps #9  
IF... I had a backhoe and I had a stump, I would probably attack it with a vengeance! If the stump was the size of my house and the backhoe the size of a tablespoon, I would still dig it out and when I got it loose, I would wrap a chain around it and pull it out of the hole, even if I had to dig a ramp in the hole for it to come out because I had to drag it. If I decided that it was too big to drag out, once I got it dug all the way around, if safe, I would burn the stump in the hole. Kind of along the line of how to eat an elephant, one bite at a time!
David from jax
 
   / Fun with Stumps #10  
Saw close to the ground and place a few inches of dirt over it. If they stay damp you'd be surprised how fast they rot out. Plant flowers or ground cover on top of it.
 

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