Backhoe Dug up first stump

/ Dug up first stump #1  

chinton

Member
Joined
Feb 24, 2009
Messages
33
Location
NW Arkansas
Tractor
Kubota L3901DT
Dug up an old stump that's been annoying us for some time and drawing termites too close to the house.
This took approximately 5 hours on the tractor's gauge to dig up and drag away. It was heavy enough that the FEL wasn't able to lift it, even after spending some time clawing the dirt off the rootball. I was unable to roll it out of the hole with the BH too. I ended up just pulling it out of the hole and off a way before pushing down a hill to other stuff to be burned.

Stump's on it's side. Paused while clawing dirt from root ball:
View attachment 474223

Pulled out of hole:
View attachment 474224

I'll be paying somebody to grind the stumps in the front yard.
 
/ Dug up first stump #2  
You have to try before you know the capability of the tractor and the value of your time.

I'll be paying somebody to grind the stumps in the front yard.

Now you know. Good job.
 
/ Dug up first stump #3  
IMG_1349.JPGGreat job , couldn't lift this one either.
 
/ Dug up first stump #4  
Soft white poplar stumps that size that I dug out took days, since they were fresh-killed and the roots too much for the mini-BH. Wish I'd had the ripper tooth back then, but I'd have been switching to/from the std bucket a lot. That said, it'll shred some rotted roots/stumps.

Different approach, but I just got the DR 14hp stump grinder and did a dozen from 4"-~14" (across) at three locations, on < a gallon of gas, and in one afternoon. As much or less hand digging on the stump grinds as stick twiddling with the BH IMO, and the awesome <200lb grinder trailers/travels a lot more easily. (IMO decaying roots may settled more over time that a typical post-dig back-fill.)

Anyway, nice work on those stump(s), guys. :thumbsup::thumbsup: You never know what you'll get into.

btw and a little OT, the 'ripper' gets roots up pretty well w/less ground disturbance than BH bucket on say 4" & smaller trees and most shrubs (IE: overgrown autumn olive with 1/2 doz+ arm-sized 'trunks'.) Stuff the Brush grubber can't just yank (saplings) comes out after a few strokes to loosen roots. (Often times I'm just tamping vs back-filling a hole, too.) The big guys, esp in the yard, well .. they're gonna be a mess no matter how you get 'em out, but won't be missed.
 
/ Dug up first stump #5  
That is a big stump. I hate digging stumps - least favorite backhoe/tractor task there is. There's just no good way to do it.
 
/ Dug up first stump #6  
I've dug up a few to large for the loader or the hoe to lift out of the hole .... used a chain and drug them out. Once out, most can be shoved along with the FEL if you are careful .... otherwise, just drag it behind with a chain or burn it where it sits.
 
/ Dug up first stump #7  
Lots to be said for the old methods. :)

Bruce

 
/ Dug up first stump
  • Thread Starter
#8  
I did watch some youtube videos of some guys blowing up dead snags with tannerite. Looks like a good way to get on the news, especially since this stump was < 50' from the house.
 
/ Dug up first stump #9  
Anyone seen a "stump planer" ? For smaller tractors like the BX, I would think this would cost less and work with the HP better. I haven't found one yet though. Here's a vid on youtube showing one: Bomford Stump Planer - YouTube
 
/ Dug up first stump #10  
Interesting tool. But obviously the unit shown is way bigger than a BX could handle. The 2 tractors shown in that video are many times larger than a BX. You'd have to redesign it so that it didn't have a long boom, but sat near to the 3ph. The weight alone of the unit would tip a BX over in a heartbeat. It also was hydraulically powered and I doubt any SCUT would have enough capacity to turn the unit effectively once you sunk it into the wood.
 
/ Dug up first stump #11  
I remember watching dad blow out stumps about 55 years ago. That was back in the day when if you wanted some dynamite you just went to the hardware store and bought some. It sure blew those stumps and big wads of dirt way up into the air.
 
/ Dug up first stump #12  
I remember watching dad blow out stumps about 55 years ago. That was back in the day when if you wanted some dynamite you just went to the hardware store and bought some. It sure blew those stumps and big wads of dirt way up into the air.

Hehe! My dad told a story about a new guy on a crew blowing stumps. They were clearing old cottonwood trees out. These trees can get to be huge, 6-7 feet diameter trunks is not unusual. So the rookie dug a hole and asked the foreman how much dynamite to use and the foreman said 2. The rookie set it and they backed up to light it off. Blew the stump a few hundred feet in the air and across the road darn near 1/10 mile. When they all picked themselves up off the ground the foreman asked the rookie what he had done and he said "I just used 2, like you said." Only he had used boxes, not sticks. I don't know how many sticks to a box, but safe to say it was several.
 
/ Dug up first stump #13  
Hehe! My dad told a story about a new guy on a crew blowing stumps. They were clearing old cottonwood trees out. These trees can get to be huge, 6-7 feet diameter trunks is not unusual. So the rookie dug a hole and asked the foreman how much dynamite to use and the foreman said 2. The rookie set it and they backed up to light it off. Blew the stump a few hundred feet in the air and across the road darn near 1/10 mile. When they all picked themselves up off the ground the foreman asked the rookie what he had done and he said "I just used 2, like you said." Only he had used boxes, not sticks. I don't know how many sticks to a box, but safe to say it was several.

The Stumps dad was blowing out, I thing he was using 1/4 and 1/2 sticks to achieve the desired effect. I don't know how many sticks are in a box for sure, but I bet somewhere around 24.
 
/ Dug up first stump #14  
I did many the same way. I found it is much easier to dig and knock over the entire tree if you have that option that you did not in this case. Do it when the ground is wet helps a lot also.
Just for your info.But I did get better at it. still a chore.
 
/ Dug up first stump #15  
A real easy way to get rid of a stump is to cut it off as close to the ground as you can. Then take a skill saw with a carbide tipped blade and cut a two inch crosshatch into the stump as deep as you can. (Make sure you use cheap saw blades.) Once the stubs are dried out knock them off with a hammer and cover the stump with dirt. Keep wet and in a year or so the stump will be mostly rotted away.
 
/ Dug up first stump #16  
That stump planer looks like an extremely slow stump grinder. Anyone care to expound on why a regular stump grinder couldn't be used in the situation given in the video. I could see a use for the boom mount if the stump was where you couldn't get the rear end of the tractor but then again, if you can mount that thing, why not just mount a hydraulic stump grinder on the boom.
 
/ Dug up first stump #17  
I remember watching dad blow out stumps about 55 years ago. That was back in the day when if you wanted some dynamite you just went to the hardware store and bought some. It sure blew those stumps and big wads of dirt way up into the air.
I also helped Dad blow some stumps, nothing as large as the video and mostly less than 1 stick would take out our largest oak tree stumps. The biggest chore was getting all the dirt gathered up and back in the hole. We didn't have FEL's back in those days and an 8N with a slip bucket was what we had.
 
/ Dug up first stump #18  
That stump planer looks like an extremely slow stump grinder. Anyone care to expound on why a regular stump grinder couldn't be used in the situation given in the video. I could see a use for the boom mount if the stump was where you couldn't get the rear end of the tractor but then again, if you can mount that thing, why not just mount a hydraulic stump grinder on the boom.

Seems to me it would be a cost issue. If the planar is just a different attachment for the post hole digger, it would cost less than $1000. I haven't seen a stump grinder for less than $6000 otherwise.
 
/ Dug up first stump #19  
I love digging up stumps. I've dug up many Red Oaks, Cherry, Maple, and Poplar stumps as well as one or two of many other varieties. The big old Maples have came closest to whooping me with root balls that were just crazy thick.

The first stump I dug up with my little scut was a Silver Maple with a root ball about 6' in diameter. I ended up channeling water from a nearby creek to the hole I dug around it. After about 24 hours of soaking it finally popped loose. It's just a good feeling once you see them start to move after hours of digging.
 
/ Dug up first stump #20  
Dug up an old stump that's been annoying us for some time and drawing termites too close to the house.
This took approximately 5 hours on the tractor's gauge to dig up and drag away. It was heavy enough that the FEL wasn't able to lift it, even after spending some time clawing the dirt off the rootball. I was unable to roll it out of the hole with the BH too. I ended up just pulling it out of the hole and off a way before pushing down a hill to other stuff to be burned.

Stump's on it's side. Paused while clawing dirt from root ball:
View attachment 474223

Pulled out of hole:
View attachment 474224

I'll be paying somebody to grind the stumps in the front yard.

Ain't diggin stumps fun? Everytime I dig one, I ending wishing for the old days when we could go down to the hardware store and buy some dynamite.
 

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