Hey guys, just joined the forum. I've been pining over a purchase for awhile, trying to figure out what best fits my needs. I've also never owned a tractor before.
I live on 5 acres I bought a couple years ago, only about 1 acre is lawn, soft and sandy soil. I moved from a highly populated neighbor with city services to the great outdoors (in the middle of the woods) I have probably 600+ feet of gravel driveway going to the house and to a detached garage away from the house. The woods I have are pretty tight with trees, no established trails, lots of dead/fallen wood I'd like to eventually cleanup/chip, probably not really enough room to do any kind of brush hogging without taking a good number of trees out.
Main tasks:
1) Grading the driveway
2) Snow plowing/blowing (storms vary here, last couple winters we've been hit by a few larger snow storms where my neighbor bailed me out with a plow)
Other tasks:
1) Lawn mowing
2) Mulching
3) Woods cleanup, firewood, chipping, etc
I've gotten estimates to do main tasks from contractors, but it's quite steep to the point where it probably makes more sense to buy my own tractor even if I don't use it quite as much as I feel like I should be. The two grading estimates I got to level things out (plenty of existing stone, just some ruts from stuff getting shifted around over the last couple years) and adding about 12 ton of stone to new areas was like $3600-5500. Even renting a tractor is probably around $1000+ a day here when all is said and done (tractor, implements, delivery, gas, cleaning). That's really the crux of it all...weighing out the infrequent but arduous tasks with the steep outsourcing prices. Snow plowing on the other hand is something where I may need it at any time in the winter. I've already learned shoveling is not an option, a snowblower may be but it's probably an all day affair.
With that said, I feel like I have a mix of very light duty tasks (lawn and landscape work) where a larger tractor is just overkill and would likely damage the lawn) and larger tasks (grading/plowing) where a smaller tractor might just not fit the bill. My initial thought process was to go with something 4x4, HST, FEL with quick attach (in case I want to add a front mounted plow or blower) in the 30-35HP range for the larger tasks and then get a small riding mower to do the lawn/landscape work. Even for mulching, there's no way for me to get a larger tractor in through the woods to where I need to mulch, and as mentioned earlier I think even with lawn tires the weight of it on the soft soil would just leave ruts all through the lawn.
Not sure if I'm on the right track, so thought I'd run it by the more knowledgeable folks here and see what you thought. My next move is to visit a local dealer and get their insight, but I'd like to go in having a general idea of what makes sense to avoid getting taken for a ride or winding up either underpowered (more likely) or grossly overpowered (less likely). I'm leaning towards a dealer over buying used mainly because I have no experience with tractors and have no idea what to even look for used wise to avoid buying a headache.
Thank you for any insight and recommendations!
I live on 5 acres I bought a couple years ago, only about 1 acre is lawn, soft and sandy soil. I moved from a highly populated neighbor with city services to the great outdoors (in the middle of the woods) I have probably 600+ feet of gravel driveway going to the house and to a detached garage away from the house. The woods I have are pretty tight with trees, no established trails, lots of dead/fallen wood I'd like to eventually cleanup/chip, probably not really enough room to do any kind of brush hogging without taking a good number of trees out.
Main tasks:
1) Grading the driveway
2) Snow plowing/blowing (storms vary here, last couple winters we've been hit by a few larger snow storms where my neighbor bailed me out with a plow)
Other tasks:
1) Lawn mowing
2) Mulching
3) Woods cleanup, firewood, chipping, etc
I've gotten estimates to do main tasks from contractors, but it's quite steep to the point where it probably makes more sense to buy my own tractor even if I don't use it quite as much as I feel like I should be. The two grading estimates I got to level things out (plenty of existing stone, just some ruts from stuff getting shifted around over the last couple years) and adding about 12 ton of stone to new areas was like $3600-5500. Even renting a tractor is probably around $1000+ a day here when all is said and done (tractor, implements, delivery, gas, cleaning). That's really the crux of it all...weighing out the infrequent but arduous tasks with the steep outsourcing prices. Snow plowing on the other hand is something where I may need it at any time in the winter. I've already learned shoveling is not an option, a snowblower may be but it's probably an all day affair.
With that said, I feel like I have a mix of very light duty tasks (lawn and landscape work) where a larger tractor is just overkill and would likely damage the lawn) and larger tasks (grading/plowing) where a smaller tractor might just not fit the bill. My initial thought process was to go with something 4x4, HST, FEL with quick attach (in case I want to add a front mounted plow or blower) in the 30-35HP range for the larger tasks and then get a small riding mower to do the lawn/landscape work. Even for mulching, there's no way for me to get a larger tractor in through the woods to where I need to mulch, and as mentioned earlier I think even with lawn tires the weight of it on the soft soil would just leave ruts all through the lawn.
Not sure if I'm on the right track, so thought I'd run it by the more knowledgeable folks here and see what you thought. My next move is to visit a local dealer and get their insight, but I'd like to go in having a general idea of what makes sense to avoid getting taken for a ride or winding up either underpowered (more likely) or grossly overpowered (less likely). I'm leaning towards a dealer over buying used mainly because I have no experience with tractors and have no idea what to even look for used wise to avoid buying a headache.
Thank you for any insight and recommendations!