How silly of me!:ashamed: I've watched gummit workers installing culverts, and there is always 4 or 5 guys leaning on shovels.

:laughing:
Truth is, the backhoe can do 60% of the work and the loader 35% (backfill), but there's still about 5% of good ol' elbow grease on a shovel and rake to make the bottom of culvert trench perfect before dropping in the culvert.
EDIT: I'm gonna get out there this morning and try to get another foot on the dam. It's slowly rising like Atlantis, but a big rainstorm would sink it like the Titanic.
EDIT2: The other day in the Texas Fall/Winter thread I was bragging about my LB75B Backhoe. Well, Mr. Murphy heard me and caused two hoses to start leaking. Both were boom lift. One on the side of the boom that had been replaced before and failed because the bend orientation was wrong. The other is the bottom hose in the side-to-side swivel clamp. It looks like an original hose that is just suffering fatigue. My dealer had one hose in stock and is ordering the 2nd to be here on Wed. I don't have a backhoe to use right now, but my clay strip mine has been supplying all the clay I need by just using the loader, so I'm still working. Maybe I should add this to my signature:
If you own a used backhoe, you WILL be buying hoses.