Brush hog vs. mower.

   / Brush hog vs. mower.
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Fantastic feedback! Thanks everyone, I'll start looking at what brush hog I should get.
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #12  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( My delima is whether to get a 3 pt. brush hog or a 3 pt. mower. How will a brush hog do in mowing regular grass? )</font>

I also vote to get the biggest rotary mower ( brush hog ) your tractor will tote. While the 'big' name brands are deffinately a great product, don't overlook some of the economy brands.. for instance KK and howse. While they are generally economy in nature... they also weight less.. which means they are easier for your tractor to tote. Also.. those 'economy' brands generally offer a HD line as well.. still cheaper than the 'big' name branded ones.

Once you get the initial heavy cutting done.. if you mow it often, there is actually little wear and tear on the mower. Also.. if you mow often.. the 'look' of the cut will improve.

I can get my pasture to look almost like a lawn, by cutting every week.

Soundguy
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #13  
I would get the rotary cutter. You can even do lawn with it as others have said... the main limitation is the lack of suction.

So if you want to mow the lawn with it, get to it before it starts to lay down or it will miss a lot. That is only really an issue for the lawn... for mowing fields it isn't a problem.
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #14  
I am with the other guys here. For that much land to mow, get the largest rotary cutter you can run. When you say "mowing regular grass" do you mean as in a nice looking lawn? If you want to maintain a half acre or so of nice lawn around the house, get a lawn tractor for that and use the rotary cutter for everything else. The big cutter will keep pasture grass looking quite nice if you mow fairly often, and will even suffice for a fair lawn, but it will not be a slick well groomed lawn look.
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #15  
Vote for bush hog here. With that much acreage you be saving yourself a lot of time. Henro's right, a bush hog cut pasture or grass area will look real good once you establish a routine of cutting. My bahia pasture looks as good as my centipede lawn when viewed from comparable distances.
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #16  
I have a 80" super duty Woods brush mower with 4 parallel belts driving 2 spindles. I have a 84" Landpride finish mower. I mow all pasture. After 3 years of use, the brush mower sits, the finish mower gets used to death. I much prefer the finish mower with four wheels floating over the surface rather then skids that are just looking for sprinklers to remove. The cut is far superior. If I'm mowing light tree clippings, my finish mower works super and pulverizes the branches. For really heavy duty stuff, the Woods brush mower is tougher, but, thats all done and now its nothing but lots of pasture grass and small sticks and saplings around my pond. Going against convention here, I much prefer the finish mower. Better cut by far and no in ground sprinklers destroyed. I have a 80" brush mower for sale, it comes with a beefy International 454D. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #17  
Most of us don't have inground sprinklers in our extended pastures.

Also.. if the person is only buying one mower... a rotary is the best option. Let that grass grow real tall one time.. ( say the guy is on vacation.. or laid up sick for a couple weeks ). Once that vegitation comes back tall and thick.. you'll wear the finish mower out trying to cut it.

If you have both.. sure.. nock the heavy out with a few cuttings of the HD mower.. then maintain with the finish mower.. That's an ideal setup.. when you have both mowers. However many of us with lots of pasture to cut don't go that route.. and I deffinately wouldn't have inground sprinklers if I had animals.. somehow I see cattly and horses tearing up an inground sprinkler as bad or worse than a mower.. and in fact.. I really don't see a rotary mower hurting a flush mount inground ( pop-up ) sprinkler..... though the shear weight of the tractor driving over it seems like it may shear the head off the pipe...

Soundguy
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #18  
You've never been to California. Northern California is very irrigation intensive, you have that luxury with a large mountain range extending to 14,000' elevations. Everyone has either in ground or above ground sprinklers if you have useable year around pasture. The Hunter small profile rubber sprinklers hardly get noticed by an animal. All my in ground heads attach via flexible PVC, almost impossible to break. The skids on the brush mower most definitely will remove the head particularly in a turn. If you have animals in the pasture out here, you really don't need to mow it. I have no animals in my pastures and mow once every 3 weeks with the finish mower. The grass is about 12" by then. I think that it depends on what your trying to do, even where you live as to what mower you ultimately need. I'm sure life in Florida is considerably different then here where we don't see rain from about May to October. We have fewer rainy days then "sunny" Florida. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
   / Brush hog vs. mower. #19  
Just don't water, then you won't have to mow!!!

/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

Bush Hog R0-720 Roll Over Box Blade (A51691)
Bush Hog R0-720...
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
2019 GEHL R105 WHEELED SKID STEER (A51242)
2019 GEHL R105...
2016 Ford Explorer (A51694)
2016 Ford Explorer...
Krupp 300 Hydraulic Hammer (A52384)
Krupp 300...
100' Roll of new 5/8"/16mm Crane Cable  (A52384)
100' Roll of new...
 
Top