Bushhogging a a hill

/ Bushhogging a a hill #1  

Buxus

Silver Member
Joined
Nov 20, 2012
Messages
186
Location
Maryland
Tractor
Kubota M7060
I am clearing the upper 60 feet of a slope that extends about 150 feet down to the shoreline. It is overgrown with invasives (wisteria, asian bittersweet, and Japanese honeysuckle). I am clearing about 200 horizontal feet. I am doing this with a chainsaw and loppers and making good progress. Downed trees (scaffolding for the vines) are pulled out with chains and moved to the burn pile.

Once cleared, I'd like to keep the vines from coming back by keeping it mowed every few weeks.

I have a Kubota M7060 HD 12 4WD with filled R4 tires, wheels spaced at the max, and a FEL. I would be mowing with a semi-mount 6 foot rotary cutter, medium duty. I would back down the 60 feet to the tree line, then come straight back up. Then move over and repeat. There would be no sideways mowing.

The slope is 25 degrees. It seems doable to me, but what do you all think - too steep?
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #2  
For me: 25 degrees? Only under ideal conditions, which are seldom.

1768611513737.png


Engine oil starvation? Rear wheel drops into a hole or soft spot? Tire slippage on a slick spot? Plan and equipment available if you get stuck?

I would clear it once or twice a year with a long reach hedge trimmer set with the head parallel to the ground. That cuts surprisingly fast with no old growth to cut.

Or hire it done.

Bruce
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #3  
Don't know the angle ... But with this 5' 3 point rotary cutter which weighs 518 Lbs, only needed 2 wheel drive on my Grand L 5030 with R1 tires NOT filled ...

IMG_20250913_164830173.jpg


However when I hook up my 90" finish mower which weighs 1102 Lbs, I needed 4X4 to pull back up the same hill ... The finish mower rides on four castor wheels, and a floppy top link hitch, so kinda more like your semi hitch ...

IMG_20251002_082118972~2.jpg


Your tractor is bigger and heavier than mine, and your tires are filled, but R1's have better traction than R4's ... But I'd definitely do it first run would be in lowest gear and 4X4, but I think with all that weight you could do it in just 2 wheel drive, lots of the older tractors didn't have 4X4 ...
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #4  
I occasionally mow a 28 degree bank with my Kubota L4060 with filled R4 rears by backing up the slope, then forward back down. ALWAYS in 4wd to avoid a wild ride down when there is less weight on the rears. I also only cut this bank under ideal weather and soil conditions.
The OP's 25 degrees is certainly doable under the right conditions and care.
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #6  
I mow one of my neighbors fields for him with my old Ford 850, never checked the angle but it is so steep that I have to brace my feet against the steering arms to stay in the seat. First time or two I mowed it I prefer to go down it but that involves a lot of circling to get back to the top, now I just turn at the bottom and go back up. Worst part are the hidden washes to watch out for because once you start down there is NO stopping. Touching the brakes you loose traction and are then sitting on a couple of thousand pound sled.
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #7  
When on similar steep (dry) land, I always keep a hand on the bucket ready to drop in case traction is lost. Damp or wet grass is very non-forgiving.
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Thank you for all the feedback. I have two questions:

1. If I choose to tackle it, should I go front first down the hill, and if so why?

2. bcp - please tell me more about engine oil starvation. I assume the oil can pool away from the oil pump? How common is this?
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #9  
Working the slope on a 45º angle will cut the degree of slope in half.
 
/ Bushhogging a a hill #10  
This was my second job with my tractor using a chain mulcher back in 2017. The "n" stands for narrow tractor. While it never shows right on cameras, the steepest part was up to 35 degrees and the flattest area was still up to 20 degrees.

This was forestry type brush, up to 3", mostly gorse. I did most of it up and down. Reversing downhill, using gravity in my favor doing the harder work (helps a lot with fuel), then come back up finishing the cut. Step over and do it all again. There was a 3 meters drop off at the very end of the valley.

IMG_20171010_172818_2.jpg
IMG_20171010_172810.jpg


I've work sideways up to 25 degrees with my narrow tractor. I wouldn't go much further than that really.

For anything steeper, I would rather use either one of these tractors with a chain mulcher but I don't own them anymore. These can handle some serious steep ground.

YDXJ0540.jpg
 

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