SSG
New member
I am a novice, amateur farmer. My fields have been tended for years by a dairy farmer who raised corn for his cattle. I plan to build my home on the land and therefore am converting the fields from row-crops to pasture for hay. I have about 40 acres of "upland" with an amazingly healthy stand of Johnson grass that I am told gets into corn seed. In order to get to Orchard grass, the local agricultural extension office told me to spray round-up, bush hog, let the Johnson grass grow, repeating the above until fall growing season, then plant the new crop.
So, I got my shiny new M9000 and a friend's 7 ft., 10 year old bush hog and promptly managed to first disconnect the drive shaft going over the bumps, which was readily repaired, before the U-joint at the PTO attachment finally sheared, rather than the shear bolts at the cutter head- my friend said "welcome to farming." Once I get the weeds cut down, I'll be able to disc the land so that it is smoother, and yes I am cutting with the field, not against it. Once the fields are in Orchard grass, I'll need a bush hog for general cleaning up aroung the edges and in another 40 acres of river bottom.
Does either a batwing, or a pull-behind non-flexing rotary cutter have an advantage, or disadvantage in rough fields over the more usual one attached at the 3 point hitch? Is the pull-behind style cumbersome? Likely to get stuck in softer ground? More or less strain on the tractor?
Any thoughts on the subject are appreciated.
Steve.
So, I got my shiny new M9000 and a friend's 7 ft., 10 year old bush hog and promptly managed to first disconnect the drive shaft going over the bumps, which was readily repaired, before the U-joint at the PTO attachment finally sheared, rather than the shear bolts at the cutter head- my friend said "welcome to farming." Once I get the weeds cut down, I'll be able to disc the land so that it is smoother, and yes I am cutting with the field, not against it. Once the fields are in Orchard grass, I'll need a bush hog for general cleaning up aroung the edges and in another 40 acres of river bottom.
Does either a batwing, or a pull-behind non-flexing rotary cutter have an advantage, or disadvantage in rough fields over the more usual one attached at the 3 point hitch? Is the pull-behind style cumbersome? Likely to get stuck in softer ground? More or less strain on the tractor?
Any thoughts on the subject are appreciated.
Steve.