The secret to pouring concrete is to have a solid base underneith it. Is the dirt alreayd compacted? Will you be adding or removing any dirt? If so, you need to be sure to compact it. When you add gravel, it must be compacted. Most people don't do this right and just spread it out and drive over it with a car. This will work in time, but nobody will spend the hours and hours that it takes to get it right. Others use a plate compactor, which is more for patios and light duty compaction as in paver bricks. If you use a plate compactor, get the biggest one you can and spend a few hours with it. Four inches is about max for what it can compact.
Having four seperate pours increases your odds of movement in one or all of them. Concrete expands and contracts from tempature. It's always moving to some degree, which is why it always cracks. To make it as strong as possible, you need the rebar to connect all four pads if you do it this way. I would use PT 1x4 lumber in between the joints and drill holes through it for the rebar.
If you are set on buying a cement mixer, compare the price and size of an electric one from a place like Home Depot or other stores. They work really well and don't involve having to keep your tractor running. If you have electricy handy, it's allot easier way to do it. You can also sell it when you are done quickly as there are about impossible to find used.
I've done up to 2 yard pours mixing cement in a mixer. It's a long, back breaking day that you will wish you hadn't started. Buying the cement in sacks from the store is expensive and not as strong of cement as you get from a concrete truck. The aggrigate (rock) is just small pea stone in the sacks.
For small pours like what you are planning, I like to rent a cement buggy from US Rentals. You get one yard in the buggy already mixed and ready to pour. Here, the going rate is $145 a yard, which is expensive, but if you only need a few yards, it's cheaper then the minimum on a cement truck.
Cement is one of those things that is very dificult to get a good result fron without years of practice and experience. If you have a nice house and this is going to be done where others will see it, I'd hire it done. I'm a General Contractor and know my limits on what I can and cannot do with concrete. A nice, finished pour that people will see isnt' something that I'll tackle myself.
For what you will pay for the cement mixer, you can probably have the whole thing poured by a crew of experts who will get it done right the first time with results you will be proud of.
If you mess up on concrete, you are stuck with the results. There is no forgiving or fixing a bad pour.
Good luck,
Eddie