bikewhisperer
New member
It's a large area to me anyway, probably not to many people here! I've had my tractor for a whole 5 days and this is the big job I need to accomplish before 1500 seedlings die.
I installed a geothermal system last fall and in doing so pretty much destroyed a 300' x 100' section of our new property. The guy who backflled did a poor job in my opinion, but what do I know. The end result is I need to smooth out this area and get it ready for tree planting.
There were 4 trenches, 5' wide x 100' long and spaced 10' between them. What little topsoil existed was not saved, a mistake that will not happen again. The surface is now hard dried up clay with lots of rocks from 1/2 inch to 18 inches. The 10 foot strips of untouched ground are visible in some spots and under 18" of clay in others, but I do know where they are as the trenches were marked. Much of the fill from the top got moved downhill and I need to move it back to the top to expose the soil underneath.
My question is what methods should I use to accomplish this task?
I've tried my box scraper, but my inexperience and all the dips and rises make for a slow process.
My best progress has so far been using the FEL and carefully exposing the untouched grass between the trenches. The plan after that is to put the topsoil where it's needed, then til the entire area, and drag something over it to smooth it out. I've considered smoothing it all out "as is" by dragging 6 large truck tires over it and ordering 300 yards of topsoil for the whole area, but since 40 yards would cover just the trenches it seems like a waste.
Any thoughts/suggestions? Am I on the right track my using the FEL? As it gets closer to smooth I'm sure I will make better use of the box scraper.
Darren
I installed a geothermal system last fall and in doing so pretty much destroyed a 300' x 100' section of our new property. The guy who backflled did a poor job in my opinion, but what do I know. The end result is I need to smooth out this area and get it ready for tree planting.
There were 4 trenches, 5' wide x 100' long and spaced 10' between them. What little topsoil existed was not saved, a mistake that will not happen again. The surface is now hard dried up clay with lots of rocks from 1/2 inch to 18 inches. The 10 foot strips of untouched ground are visible in some spots and under 18" of clay in others, but I do know where they are as the trenches were marked. Much of the fill from the top got moved downhill and I need to move it back to the top to expose the soil underneath.
My question is what methods should I use to accomplish this task?
I've tried my box scraper, but my inexperience and all the dips and rises make for a slow process.
My best progress has so far been using the FEL and carefully exposing the untouched grass between the trenches. The plan after that is to put the topsoil where it's needed, then til the entire area, and drag something over it to smooth it out. I've considered smoothing it all out "as is" by dragging 6 large truck tires over it and ordering 300 yards of topsoil for the whole area, but since 40 yards would cover just the trenches it seems like a waste.
Any thoughts/suggestions? Am I on the right track my using the FEL? As it gets closer to smooth I'm sure I will make better use of the box scraper.
Darren