Anonymous Poster
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- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
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Hi everyone!
Need some advice on how to take a couple feet of hard stuff off the high side of my pond. I want to bring the level of the earth down to about a foot above the water level.
The summer before last I had a guy come in with a bobcat, but he could only get down so far and had to stop. He called what was there shale, but I call it hard clay. It is not really rock. But it does take a pick and shovel if you are going to do any digging by hand there, except in spring when it is damp and a bit soft.
I have my Kubota B2910 now, with a toothbar on the loader and a backhoe. I think I will buy a boxblade for this project.
It seems to me that the best way to take this surface down would be to drag a box blade over it, then pick up the scrapings with the loader, and repeat, repeat, repeat…
Back up plan would be to dig the surface with the backhoe, and then grab it with the loader.
I doubt that the loader itself would be able to easily scrape thin layers off this surface, as it is so hard, and I saw the trouble that bobcat had when he got down to the harder stuff.
Here is a picture of what I am talking about. The flat surface left by the bobcat is about 10 feet wide I guesstimate. I need to go down about 2 feet I think.
Any other suggestions? Am I on the right track as far as buying a box blade for this kind of project?
OR should I just use the backhoe and loader?
I have absolutely no experience in this area. This will be a learning project.
Thanks for any advice you can offer.
Bill
Need some advice on how to take a couple feet of hard stuff off the high side of my pond. I want to bring the level of the earth down to about a foot above the water level.
The summer before last I had a guy come in with a bobcat, but he could only get down so far and had to stop. He called what was there shale, but I call it hard clay. It is not really rock. But it does take a pick and shovel if you are going to do any digging by hand there, except in spring when it is damp and a bit soft.
I have my Kubota B2910 now, with a toothbar on the loader and a backhoe. I think I will buy a boxblade for this project.
It seems to me that the best way to take this surface down would be to drag a box blade over it, then pick up the scrapings with the loader, and repeat, repeat, repeat…
Back up plan would be to dig the surface with the backhoe, and then grab it with the loader.
I doubt that the loader itself would be able to easily scrape thin layers off this surface, as it is so hard, and I saw the trouble that bobcat had when he got down to the harder stuff.
Here is a picture of what I am talking about. The flat surface left by the bobcat is about 10 feet wide I guesstimate. I need to go down about 2 feet I think.
Any other suggestions? Am I on the right track as far as buying a box blade for this kind of project?
OR should I just use the backhoe and loader?
I have absolutely no experience in this area. This will be a learning project.
Thanks for any advice you can offer.
Bill