Yard Raking Attachments

   / Yard Raking Attachments #31  
Anybody have a GOOD way to rake their yard with some sort of attachment or yard tool outside of a good old-fashioned hand rake?
I have over one and 2/3 acres of yard with many maples and Sycamore trees that lose branches and twigs like leaves. Every time there is wind, I am out there raking by hand and in many cases, I am raking the complete yard by hand.
I have tried a Pineneedle Rake, and the tires are so springy that they release the raked contents after a little loading, and do no good. I do have an Estate Rake, but twigs are not its friend. It does wonders for detaching, however.
Other options I have thought of our a power rake like a Shindiawa or Stihl, and although it’s not manually raking, hustling a 40 pound yard tool with an 18 inch brush or rubber, paddle roller, seems like a fair amount of work.
Having a $20,000 tractor sitting there, sure tries to get me to think of ways to either find an attachment, or make something that would work to save me some time.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
I have a wet weather creek/wash coming thru my yard about a 1/2 mile long. About twice a year heavy rains overflow the creek and put all the forest s#$t all over my yard and washes the gravel out of my driveway into the yard. I've just got a plain old 6' spring rake from TSC that I use to rake it all into piles near the creek and then turn the rake back the tractor into the piles and push it into the creek bottom, gone with the next rain.. works great also pulling the gravel back into the driveway.
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #32  
Anybody have a GOOD way to rake their yard with some sort of attachment or yard tool outside of a good old-fashioned hand rake?
I have over one and 2/3 acres of yard with many maples and Sycamore trees that lose branches and twigs like leaves. Every time there is wind, I am out there raking by hand and in many cases, I am raking the complete yard by hand.
I have tried a Pineneedle Rake, and the tires are so springy that they release the raked contents after a little loading, and do no good. I do have an Estate Rake, but twigs are not its friend. It does wonders for detaching, however.
Other options I have thought of our a power rake like a Shindiawa or Stihl, and although it’s not manually raking, hustling a 40 pound yard tool with an 18 inch brush or rubber, paddle roller, seems like a fair amount of work.
Having a $20,000 tractor sitting there, sure tries to get me to think of ways to either find an attachment, or make something that would work to save me some time.
Any thoughts are appreciated.

This thing works great! It's also great on gravel drives! I love mine.
Heavy Duty 3-Point Dethatcher Rake (60″) ----> Heavy Duty 3-Point Dethatcher Rake (60") CMP Attachments
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #33  
Anybody have a GOOD way to rake their yard with some sort of attachment or yard tool outside of a good old-fashioned hand rake?
I have over one and 2/3 acres of yard with many maples and Sycamore trees that lose branches and twigs like leaves. Every time there is wind, I am out there raking by hand and in many cases, I am raking the complete yard by hand.
I have tried a Pineneedle Rake, and the tires are so springy that they release the raked contents after a little loading, and do no good. I do have an Estate Rake, but twigs are not its friend. It does wonders for detaching, however.
Other options I have thought of our a power rake like a Shindiawa or Stihl, and although it’s not manually raking, hustling a 40 pound yard tool with an 18 inch brush or rubber, paddle roller, seems like a fair amount of work.
Having a $20,000 tractor sitting there, sure tries to get me to think of ways to either find an attachment, or make something that would work to save me some time.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #34  
The other option would be a mulched. But you need to do your research because some mulches do not mulch effectively as others.
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #35  
I usea Brinley Yard sweeper, 44". Mow the debris first then Sweep. Brinley has 3 rows of brushes vs Agri-fabs 2 row.
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #36  
Anybody have a GOOD way to rake their yard with some sort of attachment or yard tool outside of a good old-fashioned hand rake?
I have over one and 2/3 acres of yard with many maples and Sycamore trees that lose branches and twigs like leaves. Every time there is wind, I am out there raking by hand and in many cases, I am raking the complete yard by hand.
I have tried a Pineneedle Rake, and the tires are so springy that they release the raked contents after a little loading, and do no good. I do have an Estate Rake, but twigs are not its friend. It does wonders for detaching, however.
Other options I have thought of our a power rake like a Shindiawa or Stihl, and although it’s not manually raking, hustling a 40 pound yard tool with an 18 inch brush or rubber, paddle roller, seems like a fair amount of work.
Having a $20,000 tractor sitting there, sure tries to get me to think of ways to either find an attachment, or make something that would work to save me some time.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
if your using a lawn tractor use a set of quality mulching blades to grind it up as you mow. or you can get a pull behind lawn sweeper. I use the mulching blades on my yard
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #37  
Years ago I bought a used Little Wonder Walk behind parking lot blower, attached a 6' tongue to the frame, and mounted a ball coupler to attach to my tractor or utv hitch. Use it to blow my driveway and yard areas of all leaves and other debris.
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #38  
Anybody have a GOOD way to rake their yard with some sort of attachment or yard tool outside of a good old-fashioned hand rake?
I have over one and 2/3 acres of yard with many maples and Sycamore trees that lose branches and twigs like leaves. Every time there is wind, I am out there raking by hand and in many cases, I am raking the complete yard by hand.
I have tried a Pineneedle Rake, and the tires are so springy that they release the raked contents after a little loading, and do no good. I do have an Estate Rake, but twigs are not its friend. It does wonders for detaching, however.
Other options I have thought of our a power rake like a Shindiawa or Stihl, and although it’s not manually raking, hustling a 40 pound yard tool with an 18 inch brush or rubber, paddle roller, seems like a fair amount of work.
Having a $20,000 tractor sitting there, sure tries to get me to think of ways to either find an attachment, or make something that would work to save me some time.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
One idea is to use a yard rake ATV attachment - can pull behind most mowers as well to at least get all the yard debris in manageable rows for easier clean-up. The previous owners of our 30acre horse property left one of these in the barn. I used it a few times when grass clippings were crazy, but now I just back-cut over them to chop them up. I haven't used the rake in years. Worked well though.
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1748869378762.png
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #39  
Anybody have a GOOD way to rake their yard with some sort of attachment or yard tool outside of a good old-fashioned hand rake?
I have over one and 2/3 acres of yard with many maples and Sycamore trees that lose branches and twigs like leaves. Every time there is wind, I am out there raking by hand and in many cases, I am raking the complete yard by hand.
I have tried a Pineneedle Rake, and the tires are so springy that they release the raked contents after a little loading, and do no good. I do have an Estate Rake, but twigs are not its friend. It does wonders for detaching, however.
Other options I have thought of our a power rake like a Shindiawa or Stihl, and although it’s not manually raking, hustling a 40 pound yard tool with an 18 inch brush or rubber, paddle roller, seems like a fair amount of work.
Having a $20,000 tractor sitting there, sure tries to get me to think of ways to either find an attachment, or make something that would work to save me some time.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
I bought one of these a number of years ago for pine straw and leaves, and the only complaint I have with it is that I didn't buy it sooner! https://www.(Temporarily blocked du...e-Needle-Rake-Pine-Straw-Rake-p/ea-pnr-60.htm
 
   / Yard Raking Attachments #40  
Try one of these. It’s pretty darn effective and it’s especially good at getting up leaves in the fall. You need to find just the right setting to where it just flicks the debris up into the basket. If you set it too deeply it will just get bogged down in the grass; too lightly and it won’t pick anything up. You can attach a rope to the basket and when it’s full you just drive to your dump/mulch site and pull the rope and dump it out. I’ve used one for years and once you get it dialed in it works pretty darn good, especially for the money:

Had one similar. Great unit until the hopper gets full. It isn’t very good for trying to dump into a hole because the hopper tilts forward. The broom cannot be disengaged to freewheyit to the dump site. It was still a lot better than raking 1.5 acres of water oak and elm leaves up to 8 times every year. I still had to pick up and haul the debris in a small trailer because that sweeper isn’t very good with uneven terrain. I was regularly repairing the brushes and baffles from dinging roots and rocks. It would be a decent machine on a nice flat lot with small debris. But I would probably recommend either picking up or chopping up any sticks bigger than 1/4 inch before trying to use that sweeper. I think the larger stuff was the OP’s primary concern. A hay rake would work to windrow the stuff and most of those are designed for uneven pasture/field conditions with spring teeth like the needle rake. I solved my water oak problems a different way last year for $700 each. Despite losing the shade, seeing the inside of the stumps confirmed it was a solid decision to remove them. Every one of them was rotten in the stump because of root girdling. If you’re losing that much of the sycamore branches you might want to get it checked for disease and remove it if it’s a threat to your house. As far picking up the sticks, stiffening the needle rake might be a great idea. It’s likely to prove a decent dethatcher as well.
 
 

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