It was overgrown brush and trees but I just had all that removed. My goal in the next 4 months is to begin transforming a portion of it into a home site. So once that is done, I would need to maintain a lawn at least on a portion of it. Other than that, I would use it for creating a driveway and paths and just working the rest of the property for whatever I decide.
Tonydga,
My opinions will be a bit different than most . . but they are still worthy of consideration imo:
1st. You are in Georgia and Kubota, Yanmar, and Iseki (Massey) all make their assembly "home" in Georgia , so prices should be the best you'll find imo.
2. The 3 brands I mentioned are also the 3bI personally considered over 9 years before investing this year. Why? Simple . . Each of those brands builds their own engines for several decades. They also build for many other brands. Finslly they build thebtractors as well as the engines . . so their engineering it matched to the engines.
3. Many on TBN will tell you to use a zero turn mower for lawn . . yet in the real world . . scuts are built and designed for bigger yards and quality cutting. A scut gives you great capabilities on dlopes and hills. And better large zero turn mowers are only a couple hundred pounds lighter than the scut units.
4. A Massey GC1715 with dl95 loader and a "true mulcher mmm" (no side discharge) will run you between 14k and 15.5k depending on your states sales tax. That leaves you enough room for a quick attach for the fel, and several implements too.
5. You are wise to have hired the rough clearing done. Too often it seems people want abtractor to do everything . . but then it only does "average" on the things you do the most and does great on the things you do less.
6. Units I'd recommend considering are the
bx2670-1 (or maybe a small b26xx if you want to spend more), massey gc1715, or the yanmar 324 (not 221 imo).
7. Unless you could find a used unit that saves you 7k or more . . I'd get new with a 5 year warranty like the massey or other competitors offer
