BigOL3
Well-Known Member
Lifetime Member
There is no magic answer. Just 2 options. To do it the cheap way, requires busting your butt and a lot of sweat. To do it the easy way (sitting on your butt) means it will be expensive. I have a Takeuchi 250 with High Flow Vial brush cutter and do a little business with it at $100/hr and that is the CHEAPEST you will find it.I'm trying to figure out the easiest, cheapest way to clear brush in the woods to make new trails. Our property has quite a bit of unused ground that could be nice trails but the thick brush is such a pain to deal with. It's hilly, and I worry about rolling a tractor over. I could use a skid steer with a front mounted brush cutter, but it's pretty big. Ideally, I'd use a forestry mulcher but they are super expensive.
One of those DR field and brush mowers would do the job I think... but not exactly ideal since I can't run that and sit on my butt. LOL
I dream about being able to take a forestry mulcher back in there, but price and availability make it nearly impossible.
This brush is full of jaggers and it really sucks. I just bought a cordless hedge trimmer but much of it is just too thick and it would take a very long time to get through the amount of brush I want to get rid of. There is also a bunch of old tree tops and rotted trees laying around from the property being timbered years ago. I'd like to chop that crap up, but again I don't have access to a mulcher.
Anyone have any tips, tricks, ideas that won't cost me a million?
Alford's Land Works | Kentwood LA
Alford's Land Works, Kentwood, Louisiana. 304 likes · 1 was here. All type of skidsteer & tractor work, including but not limited to; dirt moving/leveling, thicket cl
www.facebook.com