M59
Gold Member
Future_vision,
How many holes, of what dia, of what depth, in what soil, and in what terrain?
How many holes, of what dia, of what depth, in what soil, and in what terrain?
Can't seem to get Bucket Solution's website to load. Unfortunately, no spades for sale near me either new or used. There is Amazon I guess. Titan Attachments has a couple of styles but no guarantee they will be here before the weekend.Your fears are baseless.
I purchased the Bucket Solution's (brand) Bucket Spade twelve years ago.
I have used the Bucket Spade for planting trees and excavating Palmettos, other palms and grossly overgrown twenty-year old Blueberry bushes for ten years on the L3560 bucket. Certainly at least 1,500 in number. The Bucket Spade appears as new. The bucket has minor paint scuffs where the spade pads compress.
In my opinion the optimal bare tractor weight for utilizing a Bucket Spade is 3,700 to 5,000 pounds bare tractor weight. Hydraulic power is of secondary importance in operating a Bucket Spade. Tractor weight is the most important factor as the spade is driven into ground with tractor wheel power. After first insertion the ground is loose.
The spade is 18" wide, billet forged, not stamped; weighs 110 pounds. A little ponderous for my 75 year old body to attach.
Minimal storage space required when spade is off the FEL bucket.
Being able to dig tree planting holes in front of the tractor, then move the tractor normally between digs is efficient.
Bucket Spade opinions posted on T-B-N from those that own them and use them are favorable. I seem to be the most frequent Bucket Spade user posting here.
Using the Bucket Solutions Quick Attach Spade Attachment
As I have mentioned in previous threads, I am the new owner of a Kubota L4060. Over the past two weekends I have been busy digging up two 20-30 year old Chinese Tallow stumps in an area where we plan to build a new steel building. Several weekends ago we cut down the trees and left about 5-6...www.tractorbynet.com
So these are 1-2 gallon pots. Not really sure the exact size. Soil is mostly loam with rocks. Sometimes big rocks. I probably need to go down at least a 12-18 inches. Maybe 24. diameter I would say 16 inches to be safe.Future_vision,
How many holes, of what dia, of what depth, in what soil, and in what terrain?
A digging spade...lolI'm looking at planting a row of bushes. My first inclination was a hand-held auger but that might be a rough go with holes maybe getting to 10". I could use a smaller bit and drill multiple holes and try and combine them into a larger hole but when you are talking something like 50+ holes like that....meh!. Then I started thinking that maybe a tiller for my tractor might work but those only go so deep and I still need to move the dirt out of the ditch. If I had my backhoe(on order) then I guess that would be an easy solution. Other then those options anyone have any other ideas for relatively inexpensive ways to dig these holes? Would a trencher be an option?
By hand? For 50+ holes? I'd do it but that would be rough.A digging spade...lol
1 gallon pots are less than 7” across.So these are 1-2 gallon pots. Not really sure the exact size. Soil is mostly loam with rocks. Sometimes big rocks. I probably need to go down at least a 12-18 inches. Maybe 24. diameter I would say 16 inches to be safe.