</font><font color="blue" class="small">( New to the forum, lot of great information on here to review.
I have a small piece of property that I will have horses on. I will also be leasing access to adjacent property, 2 Sections, for running a small herd of cattle. In SW Colorado I will have to feed them in the winter. So I will need to move around some round bales or large squares. The terrain is a little difficult and I have a steep graded road to get down with the bales to where I will winter the cattle. Around me is a very large Kubota dealer and a smallish JD dealer. So I am focusing on those brands. I don't want to spend over 20k for the CUT with a FEL, and a small manure spreader (<30 bushel).
What would you recommend? I am totally open, hoping to buy in the spring.
Your input is appreciated
---Doug )</font>
I noticed you talk about steepness in relationship to the road you will be using. If you are not going to have to be traversing along the sides of the hills with the round bales then a larger CUT should work fine. Your post doesn't say you will be doing this, so I am going on that assumption.
FWIW, I have been researching the purchase of a larger CUT and the information I am relaying is what I have discovered in my research.
You should be able to pick up a used ground driven manure spreader that would service you just fine.
In regards to the CUT I would look at a Kioti DK45, which is more like a utility than a CUT, a Mahindra 4110 if you want the most bang for your buck in the CUT lineup for around $20K. Mahindra also sells the 4500 utility in a 4WD, which Bill's Tractors in Texas has listed a few months ago in the $20K range.
A New Holland TC45D would likely work OK, and would exceed the $20K cap unless you find a good used model. A TC45A, TC48ATC40A, which is the no frills version of the New Holland Boomers, may be close to the $20 range.
It will be difficult to find a John Deere that is anywhere near the $20K range in a CUT to do what you want. The 990 is going to be there in price, but unless you use a 4X5 round bale the loader may be hard pressed to handle bigger bales over the long haul. Perhaps some 990 owners could speak to this issue.
Deere does sell a series of value priced tractors. They are no frills units that come only in 2wd. You should be able to get a larger utility with a loader for your $20K that will handle the bales easily enough.
The Kubota lineup's largest CUT is the
L4330 (new one is the L4430?) or the
L4300/
L4400. They are essentially the same, but the
L4300/
L4400 is the no frills gear version. The
L4300 or
L4400 may be had for your price range, but I haven't seen any prices for the
L4330 that are close to $20K.
I am not familiar enough with the Kubota line of utility tractors to know their prices for the utilities.