deezler
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2012
- Messages
- 3,591
- Location
- Southeast MI
- Tractor
- Cub Cadet 7305, Kioti CK3510seh TLB
OP posted that on Jan 22.... 6 weeks later and no update from them, eh. So maybe people join here to ask one question and then never follow up (edit: he said long time member, but only has 3 posts). Meanwhile, the TBN forum regulars just keep hashing it out for weeks, lol.
In case it helps at all. I've rented a Bobcat E35 three times now, for whenever I had trenching or land clearing projects. It was incredibly easy to learn to operate. At first you'll be clumsy and slow, but after 10+ hours, it's like the machine is an extension of your body. I went from lurching around with it, to literally bending over trees, grabbing the trunk with the hyrdaulic thumb, rip the rootball out of the ground, spin the machine as you lift up the boom and THROW the tree to the side, drive forward and repeat. I'm talking 4-5" saplings that would take under 20 seconds apiece to pull and discard of. So fun, haha.
After a full weekend of constant digging on slopes (20+ machine hours) I had some serious vertigo!
I would have encouraged the OP to leave the 12" trees intact, and fell them by digging out the rootball and using the tree's weight to pull it's own stump out. Digging a flush cut stump is much harder, you have no leverage. But when you get into a 24" tree.... that might be 80+ feet tall.... thats pretty sketchy to do with a mini ex. Grind those ones instead.
In case it helps at all. I've rented a Bobcat E35 three times now, for whenever I had trenching or land clearing projects. It was incredibly easy to learn to operate. At first you'll be clumsy and slow, but after 10+ hours, it's like the machine is an extension of your body. I went from lurching around with it, to literally bending over trees, grabbing the trunk with the hyrdaulic thumb, rip the rootball out of the ground, spin the machine as you lift up the boom and THROW the tree to the side, drive forward and repeat. I'm talking 4-5" saplings that would take under 20 seconds apiece to pull and discard of. So fun, haha.
After a full weekend of constant digging on slopes (20+ machine hours) I had some serious vertigo!
I would have encouraged the OP to leave the 12" trees intact, and fell them by digging out the rootball and using the tree's weight to pull it's own stump out. Digging a flush cut stump is much harder, you have no leverage. But when you get into a 24" tree.... that might be 80+ feet tall.... thats pretty sketchy to do with a mini ex. Grind those ones instead.