al3
Silver Member
On 40 acres, mix of tree farm red pines, big hill with hardwoods, 5 acres of meadow/fruit trees. Mostly upland but 15% next to a year round creek that has aspen/birch, alder, grasses.
Overall satisfied with the CUT to manage the place. Its size is an asset going into and moving around the woods. Things like brush hogging between the pines rows to keep invasive in check, moving downed trees/slashing with forks, skidding trunks, making/maintaining paths. Width and length are often not your friends when traversing among the trees. Smaller packaging fits into places bigger sometimes can’t.
There have been a few time larger FEL lift capacity would be welcomed. Like having a piece of heavy equipment delivered and needing it removed, moving a large piece of equipment, vehicle, or extra-large rock. I’ve rented /hired out the real heavy lifts.
I enjoyed the observations offered about attempting to go into the woods with a belly mower attached…..great advice. The same reason you should crawl under whatever you’re thinking of buying and look for things that can bend/break/snap, like transmission fans and filters, poorly routed lines and hoses, even poorly located drain cocks. Folding ROPS will get you under a lot more trees. (Safety Stasi pipe in here…..)
As pointed out it comes down to what you plan to do. What works well in wide open spaces/field work may be less than ideal in the woods. If you don’t plan to go cross country bigger can be better. Soft ground, trees on 4 foot centers or less---agility counts.
Good luck
Overall satisfied with the CUT to manage the place. Its size is an asset going into and moving around the woods. Things like brush hogging between the pines rows to keep invasive in check, moving downed trees/slashing with forks, skidding trunks, making/maintaining paths. Width and length are often not your friends when traversing among the trees. Smaller packaging fits into places bigger sometimes can’t.
There have been a few time larger FEL lift capacity would be welcomed. Like having a piece of heavy equipment delivered and needing it removed, moving a large piece of equipment, vehicle, or extra-large rock. I’ve rented /hired out the real heavy lifts.
I enjoyed the observations offered about attempting to go into the woods with a belly mower attached…..great advice. The same reason you should crawl under whatever you’re thinking of buying and look for things that can bend/break/snap, like transmission fans and filters, poorly routed lines and hoses, even poorly located drain cocks. Folding ROPS will get you under a lot more trees. (Safety Stasi pipe in here…..)
As pointed out it comes down to what you plan to do. What works well in wide open spaces/field work may be less than ideal in the woods. If you don’t plan to go cross country bigger can be better. Soft ground, trees on 4 foot centers or less---agility counts.
Good luck