Hay Dude
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2012
- Messages
- 17,946
- Tractor
- Challenger MT655E, Massey Ferguson 7495, Challenger MT535B, Krone 4x4 XC baler, (2) Kubota ZD331’s, 2020 Ram 5500 Cummins 4x4, IH 7500 4x4 dump truck, Kaufman 35’ tandem 19 ton trailer, Deere CX-15, Pottinger Hay mowers
I bid on and was awarded a decent size brush removal project. It's not an ordinary project, though.
What makes it a little different is the brush is located along about 800' of stream and a 200' long pond in swaths about 10-20' deep. The brush was allowed to flourish along the pond and stream for 5+ years while I farmed hay just beyond the brush.
The property is very delicate. It's a historical farm and is a National Historic Landmark site. The project is very visible and "neatness" counts big time. I cannot go wild with a skid loader and brush cutter and make a big mess.
The brush consists of many autumn olive trees, mostly 2-3" in diameter and many other species of stickers and invasive brush.
The ground is semi-damp. Customer (a local land conservancy) wants me to wait until winter to reduce ground compaction and disruption of animal species. Their hope is the ground may be frozen. That's about a 50-50 chance.
I have 3 farm tractors, 2 with loaders and hydraulic circuits out at loader ends.
I was thinking of approaching the stream/pond perpendicularly with tractor/loader and grasping the olive trees and "plucking" them out of the ground with a "tree puller", then cutting the rest with brush cutter & saw blade, keeping tire ruts to a minimum.
I also have a 15' Deere CX-15 bush hog, but it may not be able to be utilized in many places along the stream and it will throw a lot of flying debris into the pond.
I would have to invest ~$1,500 in the tree puller.
I welcome any suggestions and one question I have is the tree puller really effective? Would it also grasp brush and pull it, or would the brush "slip through" the jaws?
What makes it a little different is the brush is located along about 800' of stream and a 200' long pond in swaths about 10-20' deep. The brush was allowed to flourish along the pond and stream for 5+ years while I farmed hay just beyond the brush.
The property is very delicate. It's a historical farm and is a National Historic Landmark site. The project is very visible and "neatness" counts big time. I cannot go wild with a skid loader and brush cutter and make a big mess.
The brush consists of many autumn olive trees, mostly 2-3" in diameter and many other species of stickers and invasive brush.
The ground is semi-damp. Customer (a local land conservancy) wants me to wait until winter to reduce ground compaction and disruption of animal species. Their hope is the ground may be frozen. That's about a 50-50 chance.
I have 3 farm tractors, 2 with loaders and hydraulic circuits out at loader ends.
I was thinking of approaching the stream/pond perpendicularly with tractor/loader and grasping the olive trees and "plucking" them out of the ground with a "tree puller", then cutting the rest with brush cutter & saw blade, keeping tire ruts to a minimum.
I also have a 15' Deere CX-15 bush hog, but it may not be able to be utilized in many places along the stream and it will throw a lot of flying debris into the pond.
I would have to invest ~$1,500 in the tree puller.
I welcome any suggestions and one question I have is the tree puller really effective? Would it also grasp brush and pull it, or would the brush "slip through" the jaws?