Looks like I am going to be the one person to disagree with the general consensus. I also have a
BX23 and for this winter I have been using the FEL and the 60" rear blade that I have. Neither one of these is ideal in my opinion - since I don't have gauge wheels or skids on my rear blade it tends to skip on pavement and dig into the gravel parts of my driveway. I usually end up going forward pulling the blade which works ok for a time but then I get a huge wad of snow and have to stop and clear it with the FEL. Going backwards - pushing with the blade works ok but I don't think putting those kind of forces on the 3pt is necessarily the best either.
The way I thought this out was to think of what the best implements for clearing snow were and I came to the conclusion that the best combo would be to have the FEL ( I need to pile snow up because of restricted space), a blade of some sort , and a snowblower. And I don't want to be constantly swapping implements off and on just to clear off the driveway. The only way I could think of doing this was to put a snowblower on the rear, keep the FEL on - and get a plow blade that will mount to my FEL bucket or to the FEL arms themselves thru some sort of quick attach.
I managed to score a used Loftness 54" snowblower a couple of weeks ago that was originally intended for a Jacobsen industrial mower and am working on adapting it to the BX 3pt. This cost me $750.00. The next thing I am plan on doing is getting one of the Cyclone style plow blades they make for ATV's and either coming up with a mounting adapter to the FEL bucket - or make a quick attach setup for the FEL that will allow me to change out implements on FEL - which means I will be able to swap between bucket and plow relatively easily.
The reason why I think this will work for me is because 1) - I dont mind driving backwards and my driveway is only about 200 feet long, 2) a front mount blower is $2500 new from Kubota - I will get out of this for way less than that and will end up with a front blade and a blower if I can pull it all together, and 3) I think I will mostly use the blower to clear piles of snow into the backyard vs clearing the whole driveway with the blower because of the restricted space I have.
I guess the point is that like everything else you do with the tractor you need to think out what best suits your specific needs. If I had a 500 foot long driveway with plenty of space on each side to blow snow then a front mount blower would make the most sense for me too. If you don't mind driving backwards then it doesn't matter how long your driveway is - get the rear mount and save yourself $1000.