DeadlyGnat
New member
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2010
- Messages
- 5
- Tractor
- 2001 John Deere 445
Hi everyone,
First time poster.
Here is my situation. I have some landscaping I need to do to my property. I had a lot of trees (57 oak) taken down and the stumps ground and a bunch of mountain laurel/brush removed. Now I would like to work the land to get it ready for topsoil/seeding. The yard is in pretty nasty shape right now.. as you could imagine a once heavily forested area would look like once the trees/brush was removed. I have a lot of work ahead of me.. some that needs doing by hand (big rocks and some left over laurel stumps).. but I'm looking for something to make my life a bit easier to complete the job.
I own a 2001 John Deere 445 (with 60" deck). I currently have a cat o / cat 1 combo 3-point hitch on it and a Johnny Bucket Sr.(with tooth bar) on the front. Now here is the thing.. I was thinking of an attachment for the 3-point hitch to "round out" my tractor and help me in my work.
I was thinking either a box blade or a landscape/york rake. (Most likely a 4 foot version of either one.. my tractor is not that big and wouldn't want to over do it).
The box blade looks like it would help me greatly in the grading aspect. But, with the Johnny Bucket Sr. on the front, would it be kind of repetitive? The Johnny Bucket can be angled all the way to 90 degrees and can be used to back drag or as a dozer blade.. the tooth bar can also break into the hard packed soil.
The landscape/yard rake also has appeal as it would help with the initial clean up of forest debris and help with the final touches when I'm readying to topsoil/seed. But, after that.. I don't see much use for it.
I'm pretty new to all of this, so I never worked with either a box blade or rake and this is the first time tackling a landscape project for me. So, I'm about as green as they come. I do know the ground is going to be nasty to work with. There are roots everywhere from all the trees/laurel that was there. Also, I have the typical New England yard where you can blindly go to any spot, put a shovel in the ground and hit rock...
I'm open to suggestion and knowledge. Anything that can help me out would be great!
Thanks,
John
First time poster.
Here is my situation. I have some landscaping I need to do to my property. I had a lot of trees (57 oak) taken down and the stumps ground and a bunch of mountain laurel/brush removed. Now I would like to work the land to get it ready for topsoil/seeding. The yard is in pretty nasty shape right now.. as you could imagine a once heavily forested area would look like once the trees/brush was removed. I have a lot of work ahead of me.. some that needs doing by hand (big rocks and some left over laurel stumps).. but I'm looking for something to make my life a bit easier to complete the job.
I own a 2001 John Deere 445 (with 60" deck). I currently have a cat o / cat 1 combo 3-point hitch on it and a Johnny Bucket Sr.(with tooth bar) on the front. Now here is the thing.. I was thinking of an attachment for the 3-point hitch to "round out" my tractor and help me in my work.
I was thinking either a box blade or a landscape/york rake. (Most likely a 4 foot version of either one.. my tractor is not that big and wouldn't want to over do it).
The box blade looks like it would help me greatly in the grading aspect. But, with the Johnny Bucket Sr. on the front, would it be kind of repetitive? The Johnny Bucket can be angled all the way to 90 degrees and can be used to back drag or as a dozer blade.. the tooth bar can also break into the hard packed soil.
The landscape/yard rake also has appeal as it would help with the initial clean up of forest debris and help with the final touches when I'm readying to topsoil/seed. But, after that.. I don't see much use for it.
I'm pretty new to all of this, so I never worked with either a box blade or rake and this is the first time tackling a landscape project for me. So, I'm about as green as they come. I do know the ground is going to be nasty to work with. There are roots everywhere from all the trees/laurel that was there. Also, I have the typical New England yard where you can blindly go to any spot, put a shovel in the ground and hit rock...
I'm open to suggestion and knowledge. Anything that can help me out would be great!
Thanks,
John