CJONE
Veteran Member
Ive been able to push trees(mainly mesquites) over with my bucket but I few small roots remain intact so I decided a grapple would help me complete the job by breaking few small roots then piling the brush into a burn pile. I would like to push them over with the grapple on the front so I don't have to change between the bucket and the grapple. the ground out here is pretty saturated right now so pushing them over hasn't been a problem for my tractor. My tractor weighs in at 10k its a little larger than CUTs I know FEL aren't designed to push but im only doing a few acres with my loader and the rest I will buy a track loader or contract it out
EDIT: I wouldn't drive through the woods and try to rake 6"to 8" deep with any grapple rake that seems very dangerous... Im talking on a per tree basis where I can already see the roots after I push it over.. these trees are less the 6-8" in diameter too.
The biggest tree I pushed out was a 16" basswood, they have a poor root system. Popped a couple of roots and down she went. Tied into a 14" split maple and ended up tieing my truck to it and then the tractor/truck combo finished it. I am also in a clay loam soil so that does not help. Whoever started the myth that FEL's arn't designed to push must of had a VERY weak design. That is about all I have done with mine for over 300 hours, no issues. Use common sence and you will be fine. The bottom tube on my grapple is bent a little from carring 10' and 12' long logs longways otherwise it is still in good shape, But that is way more than it is designed for. As far as hoses if you are only going to use the grapple the 3/8" is more than enough but to run anything with a motor go with 1/2" CJ