robison
Silver Member
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2005
- Messages
- 124
- Location
- Western Massachusetts
- Tractor
- John Deere 4510 / John Deere GT235 / DR mower
Take a small stream flowing to a low dam for what used to be a 2-foot-deep trout pond. Stream has silted up to where there is now a 10 foot wide island in the middle and two 6-foot-wide corridors of stream on either side, maybe 1-1.5 feet deep at most.
Can I go in there with my Deere 4510 and use the loader to scoop the silt from the island and simply build up the shores a bit with it, thereby converting it back into a shallow pond?
How deep a water can I work a tractor like a 4510 in safely? I do not think it will sink more than 5-6 inches into the sand but I have no real idea how deep a water depth these machines can work with.
I can do this at low water but it never dries up.
And with regard to the obvious question of getting stuck, I have a truck with a strong winch available to help the tractor out if it needs it.
I know a backhoe might do this better, and I could consider that but I don't presently have one and I do have the loader. It seems like the loader could make short work of the necessary dirt moving if not for the water.
Can I go in there with my Deere 4510 and use the loader to scoop the silt from the island and simply build up the shores a bit with it, thereby converting it back into a shallow pond?
How deep a water can I work a tractor like a 4510 in safely? I do not think it will sink more than 5-6 inches into the sand but I have no real idea how deep a water depth these machines can work with.
I can do this at low water but it never dries up.
And with regard to the obvious question of getting stuck, I have a truck with a strong winch available to help the tractor out if it needs it.
I know a backhoe might do this better, and I could consider that but I don't presently have one and I do have the loader. It seems like the loader could make short work of the necessary dirt moving if not for the water.