Bartley
New member
Ok here it goes, sorry its long. I have 20 acres, mostly slopes ( I would not say hills). My wife has horses and I need a tractor. Most of the time on a tractor would be pasture mowing. But in the long run I would like a FEL for small jobs so 4wd would be nice.
Here is the problem, in the winter we like to buy round bales to feed, about 20 a year. It is a whole lot cheaper and a lot nicer in the winter to look out and see that the auto waterer is working ( and the all of their feet are still pointing in the right direction) rather than having to feed square bales all day long. Of course it would need to start in cold weather.
For the past 2 years I have pulled round bales out to feed with my pickup, dangerous and just a matter of time until I tear up the truck (or something else). These bales vary in weight from 1000 to 2000lbs.
I don’t really need that large of tractor, other than the round bale issue. Of the 20 acres, only about 10 of it is pasture (the rest yard, pond, house, barn, and so on). It would need mowed maybe 3 times a year I would say.
In the spring, before the grass really comes on, we still feed round bales. This is a major problem after thaw and during the rains of spring. Things are really muddy at times.
I want to make sure that I get a tractor that will last and that will have parts available for a long time. I don’t see putting that many hours on the tractor a year.
For those of you that have pleasure horses you know they don’t make you any money. With that fact, and with a limited budget, I need to try to stay as cheap as I can.
I have looked at tractors and spending $15,000 for one does not seem like something I can do, or should do. I could see doing that if I was farming or making any kind of money with it. But if I bought one and kept it 10 years I bet I would not have a 1000hrs on it. I am sure I would use it more than I think, but still it would not be that much.
Any ideas, what the smallest tractor I could buy that I could safely moved round bales with the 3pt? What is the rule of thumb with that, weight of tractor, lifting cap, vs weight of the load? Is it as simple as if the bale weights 1500lbs, the tractor will lift 2000lbs, and weights 3000lbs, then I am safe?
Thanks in advance for the ideas….
BARTLEY
Here is the problem, in the winter we like to buy round bales to feed, about 20 a year. It is a whole lot cheaper and a lot nicer in the winter to look out and see that the auto waterer is working ( and the all of their feet are still pointing in the right direction) rather than having to feed square bales all day long. Of course it would need to start in cold weather.
For the past 2 years I have pulled round bales out to feed with my pickup, dangerous and just a matter of time until I tear up the truck (or something else). These bales vary in weight from 1000 to 2000lbs.
I don’t really need that large of tractor, other than the round bale issue. Of the 20 acres, only about 10 of it is pasture (the rest yard, pond, house, barn, and so on). It would need mowed maybe 3 times a year I would say.
In the spring, before the grass really comes on, we still feed round bales. This is a major problem after thaw and during the rains of spring. Things are really muddy at times.
I want to make sure that I get a tractor that will last and that will have parts available for a long time. I don’t see putting that many hours on the tractor a year.
For those of you that have pleasure horses you know they don’t make you any money. With that fact, and with a limited budget, I need to try to stay as cheap as I can.
I have looked at tractors and spending $15,000 for one does not seem like something I can do, or should do. I could see doing that if I was farming or making any kind of money with it. But if I bought one and kept it 10 years I bet I would not have a 1000hrs on it. I am sure I would use it more than I think, but still it would not be that much.
Any ideas, what the smallest tractor I could buy that I could safely moved round bales with the 3pt? What is the rule of thumb with that, weight of tractor, lifting cap, vs weight of the load? Is it as simple as if the bale weights 1500lbs, the tractor will lift 2000lbs, and weights 3000lbs, then I am safe?
Thanks in advance for the ideas….
BARTLEY