Dirt Scoop

   / Dirt Scoop #21  
If you choose to think that anyone who does something you couldn't is lying, I can't stop you. But, sure seems like an awful closed minded way to view the world.

Nope. Just been there, done that, got the T-shirt. ;) Technically, a million men with a million spades could dig the Grand Canyon; just not in this millennium. Nothing but little ole water dug all that. It just took a long time. I also don't consider a low spot that dries up in the summer a "multi-acre pond" either.
 
   / Dirt Scoop #22  
At the end of the day YOU couldn't get the scoop to function to your satisfaction. Therefore, you now claim that it is impossible for it to have worked for anyone else and they are making up tall tales about digging with them. Seems to be an ego issue to me that you had trouble with it.

I could easily and did dig a ditch with mine, the only real slowdown coming in the amount of dirt the scoop could hold and how long it took me to get to where I wanted to dump it. They actually work great for this, you straddle where you want it, drop the scoop and drive till it's full.

I have no reason to believe that given a few months and good weather, that I could not dig a respectable pond with one. Will it be fast? No. Would it be a reasonable way to do it on a budget? I think so, if you have the free time to commit to it. It isn't an ideal way, but it certainly would work, even if you don't think it will.
 
   / Dirt Scoop #23  
A pond scoop is a very handy tool. Back when I didnt have a front loader on a 4wd tractor, I used mine a lot. I think a pond scoop is handier than a front loader on a 2wd tractor because it dont have the traction issue. You actually gain traction as you fill that rear scoop rather than loose it like you do with a front loader on a 2wd. I dug a pond about 50 x 50 x 6 ft deep with one, useing my 8n, takeing about a week. I also used the pond scoop to load manure spreaders, trucks and trailers by hooking a 3-point boom up to the top link position and making some extensions to hook the lower links. You need a tractor with some weight forward and considerable hydraulic power to do this however. My 8n could barely lift the empty scoop out on the boom, but my Ford 2000, with some front suitcase weights, could easily lift a heaping scoop. When using the pond scoop in the reverse position, you need a low gear and stabilizers on your lower links to keep them from bending. Again, the 8n was no good for this with reverse = 3rd gear, but the 2000 in low range reverse was perfect. The pond scoop also worked good for transplanting trees, just dig a hole with it, then go scoop the tree, wrapping a chain around the trunk as you lift, and move it to the hole.
 
   / Dirt Scoop
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Went and talked to the gentleman who had it and brought it home.

Looking forward to trying it out, that's when it dries out a little.

My wife gave me a look when I pulled up with it. Told her I only needed a brush cutter when I bought the tractor. Now have a box blade, the cutter, a finish mower, and now a dirt scoop. :D
 
   / Dirt Scoop #25  
about 20 years ago I was barrowing my neighbors rear scoop quite a bit so I decided I needed one and built on my self. I never used it pulling it so mine is sbuilt to push into a pile and drive away. I have used it for a lonng time now and still do use it on ocassion. I didnt have the $$$$ for a fell when I built it and still don't so as someone else said it is a "poor mans loader" and for all I have invested it is well worth the money! It has out lived 2 tractors and is being used with the 3rd when I built it I painted it blue to match the tractor I had have had 2 blue ones and now I use it on an Orange one......I need to get that thing repainted!
 
   / Dirt Scoop #26  
Go to the Miskin scraper website and look at the first one they made building the levee at Shreeveport lol. My father said they used to get 2 tractors with scoops to build smller ponds for live stock. The man that builds our dumpsters has a 3020 JD. He built a pondscoop about 36 inches wide and 12 inches tal land about 36 long. When working in the shop if he got tired or bored he would get on the tractor and dig. He built about a 1/2 acre pond pretty deep.
 
   / Dirt Scoop #27  
At the end of the day YOU couldn't get the scoop to function to your satisfaction. Therefore, you now claim that it is impossible for it to have worked for anyone else and they are making up tall tales about digging with them. Seems to be an ego issue to me that you had trouble with it.

Apparently the difference is that my time is worth money. I'm not retired, bored and looking for something to do with my time. My time is worth far more than wasting it scratching a little dirt with a little scoop. The only "ego" issue is tall tales of digging "multi-acre" ponds with the wrong tool. ;)
 
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   / Dirt Scoop #28  
A dirt scoop is a good choice for folks who are not fortunate enough to afford a 4wd tractor with a front loader, and would serve them better, in many cases, than a front loader on a 2wd, non-power steering tractor. There is no doubt that a 4wd, power steeing front loader is a far more effective tool, but not everyone can swing one of those these days. To belittle those that cant is kind of sad.
 
   / Dirt Scoop #29  
Dargo, I am going to have to join the rest of these guys and say it is not a lie that many ponds were dug with them. I have a 1957 Ferguson and scoop that built a pond way back in the 50's, have fished in that pond many times, it is plenty deep and about 2 acres.

Years ago the farmers would dig ponds in the off season. Labor was cheap and their help needed to make 40 hrs. Yes it was slow, not as productive as more modern equipment, but it did happen.

I used it to bury a horse 2 months ago. Yes, a front end loader or backhoe would have been faster. But the scoop was free years ago and it got the job done. Took 4 hrs total to dig and cover back up. And I dug it 6 ft deep. Had to dig a lot bigger hole than needed, but it worked, didn't cost me 200.00 for a backhoe either. So, 200.00 divided by 4 hrs, I figure I was making 50.00 an hour to do it the old timey way. After 4 hrs of degrading poor mans loader operating, I still had my 200.00 in my back pocket and a horse 6' under. Used a scrape blade to fill in the hole and a boxblade to landscape it smooth.

My first attemp to really dig anything was not as fast. I figured if the old guys could dig a pond with it, I could dig a hole to push in an old burnpile on a piece of property I bought next door. It took some trial and error but I figured it out.

I try to keep a load of sand, a load of sandclay and several loads of topsoil in the back of my property to use when and where needed. I use the scoop to move it wherever I need to fill in a low spot or build up a place before building a shelter or such. Works great AFTER you get the hang of it. Like anything else, you got to learn the tool and how to use it.
 
   / Dirt Scoop #30  
I must add that I've seen ponds[not large] dug with a slip scoop and they do work.If they didn't work I suspect the many companies that make them wouldn't continue to make a product that didn,t sell because they don't work:)Dave
 
 

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