Gopher mount leveling.

/ Gopher mount leveling. #1  

NoSmoke

Member
Joined
Mar 23, 2023
Messages
25
Location
Rocky View County, Alberta
Tractor
YM155D
Was wondering if anyone might have some ideas on a home-built device to be towed behind a small tractor (Yanmar 15HP) for smoothing out the mounts of dirt that pocket gophers leave (I'm getting tired of rakin' the dang things). Maybe something shop built, maybe something purchased? It would have to be something that would smooth the loose dirt but not gouge the grass too much.

Thanks for any suggestions.
 
/ Gopher mount leveling. #2  
YORK makes a rake with a fold down blade that rides on sulky wheels.

TA6B

I have one, and works a treat on anything that sticks up. I find the height adjuster on the tool is good for most needs, but when the attach point is fitted to the three point tool bar, every degree of subtlety is obtained. I had mine fitted with a hydraulic cylinder, but removed that when I went from "garden tractor" to a fully functional 3pth.
 

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/ Gopher mount leveling. #4  
I drag a 4-5 foot long section of railroad track....If not that a section of chain link fencing that is folded over and some big heavy rocks inside .. essentially it is anything that resembles a harrow....
 
/ Gopher mount leveling. #6  
We have one of these pull behind graders made by Ratchet Rake. It is built heavy duty. When you are done, flip it over onto it's wheels and tow it. You can easily move it by hand and it flips up on end so it stores out of the way.

 
/ Gopher mount leveling.
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Thank you all for the great suggestions, both store bought and shop made. The weighted chain link fence material sounds interesting in particular - I think I'll try that first.

Say what you will but poisoning wildlife, even if they are "just" gophers, doesn't work for me.
 
/ Gopher mount leveling.
  • Thread Starter
#10  
If you don’t kill the gophers, you will be using your drag weekly and have nothing but bare dirt.
I dunno, I've been manually raking the mounds for years and the problem ebbs and flows but hasn't really gotten much worse. I've found if the dug up loam is spread around the grass grows back through it quickly so the overall area with bare ground stays fairly small. The biggest problem is the undisturbed mounts make mowing a rough job and look crappy.


Maybe it depends on climate and specific species of gopher(?). But, I understand the problem - it would be better if there were a more humane way of dealing with it (an animal dying of strychnine poisoning is something I won't deal with).
 

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