I think this is the best topic to post under though really I'm just wanting to bush hog more rather than bale anything.
My issue is that the previous land owner had about 10 acres cleared with a tree hog and among that area were a few Osage trees. Last year I asked a local guy if he would bush hog and later I found he decided to skip it because being a small job he was concerned some of the thorns might cause him more flats than the pay. I can understand reasoning like that but I'm still left with an large area to be cut. How best to get this done without blowing a fortune in tractor tires?
I can figure using slime but then I read on here where it may fail due to freezing temperatures and leave the tractor sitting on flat tires.
Plus I might need to drain the tires before sliming them, yet since the area is hilly I might need to put water back in to lower the cg. Is that even possible or will it ruin the slime?
Are plugs a viable fix or will I be out numbered by holes. Should I just plan on buying new tires and mow as fast as I can, how long will thorns be an issue?
Personally I don't think there are many thorn issues on most of the land since I walked much of it while it was still ankle high last spring. Of course if there is even a smallish area with a few branches then passing back and forth several times could introduce 4 tires to many opportunities.
Sorry for so many questions in my first post, words from experience will be greatly appreciated!
Thanks
My issue is that the previous land owner had about 10 acres cleared with a tree hog and among that area were a few Osage trees. Last year I asked a local guy if he would bush hog and later I found he decided to skip it because being a small job he was concerned some of the thorns might cause him more flats than the pay. I can understand reasoning like that but I'm still left with an large area to be cut. How best to get this done without blowing a fortune in tractor tires?
I can figure using slime but then I read on here where it may fail due to freezing temperatures and leave the tractor sitting on flat tires.
Are plugs a viable fix or will I be out numbered by holes. Should I just plan on buying new tires and mow as fast as I can, how long will thorns be an issue?
Personally I don't think there are many thorn issues on most of the land since I walked much of it while it was still ankle high last spring. Of course if there is even a smallish area with a few branches then passing back and forth several times could introduce 4 tires to many opportunities.
Sorry for so many questions in my first post, words from experience will be greatly appreciated!
Thanks