California
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2004
- Messages
- 16,689
- Location
- An hour north of San Francisco
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM240 Yanmar YM186D
I haven't seen anyone emphasize in this thread: If you decide on the backhoe - for this and versatility on other projects - don't consider a 3-point version. You need a frame mount version designed specifically for your model tractor. (And either version is a bit of a chore to install/remove). There are posts here about a 3-point hoe ripping the back off the transmission housing. Digging, and bouncing during transport. Also there is potential to break the tractor in half just behind the engine for lack of a full length sub-chassis. A 3-point hoe is a light-duty farm accessory, not a production tool.
I use a 3-point hoe in the apple orchard to remove stumps. But these stumps are universally rotten, punky, by the time a tree falls down so they don't put up a fight like the roots from a logged healthy tree. Digging out a cavity the size of a card table will generally snap any rotten roots I encounter, and assure that a new tree isn't planted right over a gopher convention center that was likely what killed the first tree.
A backhoe is a lot more versatile than just digging stumps. Here (photo) I'm weeding around orchard trees where the disc can't reach, grubbing out blackberries and yanking out little volunteer oaks that were entwined with the apple tree roots.
For your situation, I would rent a small excavator rather than buy either attachment. Or buy an old one that can be resold for what you paid - and treat it gently so nothing expensive breaks.
I use a 3-point hoe in the apple orchard to remove stumps. But these stumps are universally rotten, punky, by the time a tree falls down so they don't put up a fight like the roots from a logged healthy tree. Digging out a cavity the size of a card table will generally snap any rotten roots I encounter, and assure that a new tree isn't planted right over a gopher convention center that was likely what killed the first tree.
A backhoe is a lot more versatile than just digging stumps. Here (photo) I'm weeding around orchard trees where the disc can't reach, grubbing out blackberries and yanking out little volunteer oaks that were entwined with the apple tree roots.
For your situation, I would rent a small excavator rather than buy either attachment. Or buy an old one that can be resold for what you paid - and treat it gently so nothing expensive breaks.
