DrDave1958
New member
Rent one for a week. That will answer your question of whether or not you need to own one. Weekly and monthly rentals are much cheaper than the daily rate.
y
I bought a new cab kx-121-3 back in o6. Except for a new battery and normal maintenance it’s been pretty much trouble free. I don’t have a mulching attachment but I have repaired stone walls, fixed drainage for 100’s of feet to contain seasonal brooks, stumped a couple acres (easily dug out 8-10-12 inch stumps. I had a neighbor with a big cat dig the bigger 18-34” stumps), buried dead cows / sheep, fed logs to my wood processor, dug out or buried boulders that were exposed in places I didn’t want them. I’ve dug out my 6040 and 1720 ford when I got them buried to the frame deep in mud feeding cows / sheep during April mud season. It cost me 41k then, may sit for a week or 3 but I like the convenience of owning vs renting which is pricelessWe just purchased a new property thats 48 acres, approximately 25 acres in hardwoods, 20 in pasture, and half of a 5-6 acre pond. I've got the pasture maintenance covered, and have a grapple to clean up downed trees, etc. I've gotten really interested in a 3-5 ton mini excavator with a flail or mulcher head to clean up the woods and pond bank. I've been watching videos lately and they just seem so useful for keeping the underbrush in the woods cleaned out, which makes for a much nicer property. On the flip side, I don't NEED to clean out the underbrush or most of the pond bank, and their very expensive.
Am I better off just leaving the woods natural? Hiring someone with an excavator to come clean up a little? maybe just the pond bank? Or are these things really as useful as they look and a great investment for a landowner?
cWe just purchased a new property thats 48 acres, approximately 25 acres in hardwoods, 20 in pasture, and half of a 5-6 acre pond. I've got the pasture maintenance covered, and have a grapple to clean up downed trees, etc. I've gotten really interested in a 3-5 ton mini excavator with a flail or mulcher head to clean up the woods and pond bank. I've been watching videos lately and they just seem so useful for keeping the underbrush in the woods cleaned out, which makes for a much nicer property. On the flip side, I don't NEED to clean out the underbrush or most of the pond bank, and their very expensive.
Am I better off just leaving the woods natural? Hiring someone with an excavator to come clean up a little? maybe just the pond bank? Or are these things really as useful as they look and a great investment for a landowner?
I've got 57 acres (WI) and bought a Kubota mini a few years ago. I do regret that -- because I should have bought one sooner! I do not clean out the underbrush in our woods, but I do use it (with a Toolcat - which I would not live without) to harvest fallen trees for firewood. A primary use for me has been cleaning up trees that pop up all over the pasture like mulberry and black locust (trees that spread like weeds). Much easier than chainsaw and stump grinder when you want clean up some stuff - just knock it down (carefully - some people don't think about the leverage a tree has on your tiny little machineWe just purchased a new property thats 48 acres, approximately 25 acres in hardwoods, 20 in pasture, and half of a 5-6 acre pond. I've got the pasture maintenance covered, and have a grapple to clean up downed trees, etc. I've gotten really interested in a 3-5 ton mini excavator with a flail or mulcher head to clean up the woods and pond bank. I've been watching videos lately and they just seem so useful for keeping the underbrush in the woods cleaned out, which makes for a much nicer property. On the flip side, I don't NEED to clean out the underbrush or most of the pond bank, and their very expensive.
Am I better off just leaving the woods natural? Hiring someone with an excavator to come clean up a little? maybe just the pond bank? Or are these things really as useful as they look and a great investment for a landowner?
Aside from renting, do you have fond memories of playing with Tonka toys as a child?Rent one for a week. That will answer your question of whether or not you need to own one. Weekly and monthly rentals are much cheaper than the daily rate.
I have an L39 that will seriously out dig the CK35.Another factor: I have a backhoe for the CK35, so can do most of the digging I may need, although slow
Why a big swiss army knife and an even bigger multi tool? I can see the either the 420 or M62 but would not a CTL, or excavator with blade and thumb be more productive as the second machine?I have a cat 420 and a kubota m62. For most things I do, they do. The only plowing I do is fiber optics. What is snow? An excavator with mats will go where a backhoe won't.
It's actually a story of a criminal small town Sheriff that leads a department of criminal cops. They escalate situations and violate the rights of innocent citizens. It's fiction based on reality. For reality just search "photography" on YouTube.Or maybe a rental unit?
Dang rent is so expensive. You could pay for one real quick just in clean up work on that huge property. Then start a business with it and hire out. Start a little smaller ? Look at used ? No down side to an excavator. With all the fires around, brush clean up is mandatory. May evan save on property insurance ?We just purchased a new property thats 48 acres, approximately 25 acres in hardwoods, 20 in pasture, and half of a 5-6 acre pond. I've got the pasture maintenance covered, and have a grapple to clean up downed trees, etc. I've gotten really interested in a 3-5 ton mini excavator with a flail or mulcher head to clean up the woods and pond bank. I've been watching videos lately and they just seem so useful for keeping the underbrush in the woods cleaned out, which makes for a much nicer property. On the flip side, I don't NEED to clean out the underbrush or most of the pond bank, and their very expensive.
Am I better off just leaving the woods natural? Hiring someone with an excavator to come clean up a little? maybe just the pond bank? Or are these things really as useful as they look and a great investment for a landowner?
Yeah, I’ve been thinking about it since I posted this morning, when I started to tally up the tracked skid steer and mulcher combo cost and pretty quickly answered my own question.I agree, but that's an expensive club to join!
Just the price of a mulching head would buy a mini ex. Now I understand that either way he's buying a mulcher, but a CTL capable of mulching is a more expensive power unit than a mini ex. Another thing is an excavator is much more user friendly for a homeowner IMHO.
agrotkindustrial.com
Here is the Power Trac ForumGet a Power Trac first. I have the 1430 and it does pretty much everything in the woods, especially getting around in tight spots. Made in America.
T12 Class
Compact Tractors, Slope Mowers, Articulated Tractors, Tractor Attachments, Trailer Packagespower-trac.com
View attachment 2912346
Attachments for all your needs. The Brush Cutter is almost unstoppable, I've done some "terrible things" to unwanted vegetation with this thing.
Attachments
Compact Tractors, Slope Mowers, Articulated Tractors, Tractor Attachments, Trailer Packagespower-trac.com
View attachment 2912345
..and hauled around some big 'ol 10' long logs with the 4-in-1 Bucket...
View attachment 2912348
...and the Box Blade fluffs up your gravel driveway real nice.
View attachment 2912350
Then I got the Sany SY35SU Excavator @8500 Lbs. Big enough and small enough for the woods.
View attachment 2912351
...and put this on it with slight modifications to the mount. It eats blackberry bushes and 3"-4" trees for lunch, and limbs trees 12'-14' from the ground.
![]()
54 Mini Excavator Brush Cutter 3 to 8-Ton Carrier, 16-21 GPM For Sale| AGT-EXRC54
54" Mini Excavator Brush Cutter 3 to 8-Ton Carrier, 16-21 GPM For Sale| AGT-EXRC54agrotkindustrial.com
View attachment 2912353
And when all else fails for a Big Job, rent!
Wishing you well.