CliffordK
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2013
- Messages
- 2,068
- Location
- Eugene, Oregon
- Tractor
- Toro D200, Ford 1715, International 884,
Years ago we had a CAT clear the back pasture of nasty scrubby pear trees. They pushed trees, roots, everything into about 10 big piles.I quit digging out tree muffins long ago. I stump grind everything now and call it good. Tree muffins never burn well anyway. Come to think about it, I have a whopper on one of my rentals that needs converted to wood chips, maybe when the weather warms up, maybe.
It has been a while but I think we would burn the piles once. Then take a Pulaski to the root balls. It really wasn't that bad to chop the dirt out. Then re-pile, and re-burn.
Two or three burns for each pile, and it was all gone. With a little drainage, it has made a nice hay field.
Although, for big stumps in our oak grove, we generally cut the firewood and leave the stumps to rot away. They don't hurt anything, and become uniquely weathered drift-wood like over the years.
My brother and mother tried to move an old brush hog with her brand new, at the time, Kubota BX2380 and front end loader. Something slipped and they turned that brush guard into a pretzel pretty quickly. It took a bit of work to get the guard straightened out, and a few dents in the hood. Those guards just aren't strong against a lot of abuse. Yet, I will admit that the damage to the hood and front grill was minimal.