You've got a house mower. So you don't need a small tractor. For the work you suggest it sounds to me like Grand L minimum, probably MX or M. Dad had an M that he eventually upgraded to a 100HP Kioti - he got sick of brush hogging to trim the tops of his paddocks, and got a dual spindle rotary cutter that needed more HP. He had about 80 acres, and NZ pasture is probably a bit more lush than Texas, so I'm not saying you need 100HP, but LX size machines sound too small for what you're talking about.
I'd think hard on a backhoe. Post holes are better dug with a post hole digger than a backhoe. But actually, at least around here, everyone uses a hydraulic post rammer - so you get a guy out and he does your whole fence line in an hour or so. An auger post hole digger would go on any of the machines we're talking about, but again a large L or an MX/M would be better (mostly for range of motion on the 3ph, not for HP). Moving trees and shrubs sounds good with a backhoe, but often you do better work with a shovel (which sucks, I know, but there it is). You can still use the FEL bucket and/or a chain to move the shrub, but digging it out with a machine isn't always a recipe for it surviving. And digging in new trees with a machine can lead to glazing the sides of the hole, so it won't grow well. I guess depends how large the trees/shrubs you're moving are.
The side mower, as others have said, is the machine that matters. You can get some with counter balancing ballast, but really you need a heavy machine to run one of them. I think they're relatively common on an M, not sure about an MX or Grand-L. Bottom line, you need to work out that piece of equipment, and then buy the tractor that will run it. Everything else you describe can be done on any of the machines, just faster or slower depending on size.
My rule of thumb would be:
- 1-2 acres, mostly mowing plus some around house duties - BX
- 1-5 acres, mowing plus running some 3ph implements and more loader user - B
- 2-10 acres, some mowing but getting more focused on lift and carry, implements - LX
- 10-20 acres but not much farming, standard L, Grand-L (depending on how much luxury you like). And Grand-L if you still want MMM
- 10-50 acres, but using real farm equipment - MX, M and above, depending on the equipment you need to run (e.g. if you're haying then you need a tractor that'll run a bailer or a mower, if you're feeding animals you need a machine that'll lift the bales that you're going to feed out, if you're pulling a plow or discs you need a machine big enough to pull those implements)
It sounds to me like you're in the 10-20 but not so much farming - more maintaining the land and running a few specific implements.
Do you have much in the way of trees? I haven't seen people mention grapples, but they're super useful for moving branches and trash. For the driveway consider a grading scraper, not just a box blade. Many people swear by them.
On the mower, I'd look more to a finish mower or a flail or batwing rather than a rotary cutter. Depends I guess how nice you want the finished product to be - but if you're not running animals on it then you're mowing it to look nice......if you borrow/rent a rotary cutter for the first few passes, then a finish mower will maintain it thereafter. You can run a much wider finish mower - if you have ruts the tractor needs to go slow, so you want to cut a wider area if you can. Also, a bigger machine (MX, M) will ride much nicer over ruts.
I'd think hard on a backhoe. Post holes are better dug with a post hole digger than a backhoe. But actually, at least around here, everyone uses a hydraulic post rammer - so you get a guy out and he does your whole fence line in an hour or so. An auger post hole digger would go on any of the machines we're talking about, but again a large L or an MX/M would be better (mostly for range of motion on the 3ph, not for HP). Moving trees and shrubs sounds good with a backhoe, but often you do better work with a shovel (which sucks, I know, but there it is). You can still use the FEL bucket and/or a chain to move the shrub, but digging it out with a machine isn't always a recipe for it surviving. And digging in new trees with a machine can lead to glazing the sides of the hole, so it won't grow well. I guess depends how large the trees/shrubs you're moving are.
The side mower, as others have said, is the machine that matters. You can get some with counter balancing ballast, but really you need a heavy machine to run one of them. I think they're relatively common on an M, not sure about an MX or Grand-L. Bottom line, you need to work out that piece of equipment, and then buy the tractor that will run it. Everything else you describe can be done on any of the machines, just faster or slower depending on size.
My rule of thumb would be:
- 1-2 acres, mostly mowing plus some around house duties - BX
- 1-5 acres, mowing plus running some 3ph implements and more loader user - B
- 2-10 acres, some mowing but getting more focused on lift and carry, implements - LX
- 10-20 acres but not much farming, standard L, Grand-L (depending on how much luxury you like). And Grand-L if you still want MMM
- 10-50 acres, but using real farm equipment - MX, M and above, depending on the equipment you need to run (e.g. if you're haying then you need a tractor that'll run a bailer or a mower, if you're feeding animals you need a machine that'll lift the bales that you're going to feed out, if you're pulling a plow or discs you need a machine big enough to pull those implements)
It sounds to me like you're in the 10-20 but not so much farming - more maintaining the land and running a few specific implements.
Do you have much in the way of trees? I haven't seen people mention grapples, but they're super useful for moving branches and trash. For the driveway consider a grading scraper, not just a box blade. Many people swear by them.
On the mower, I'd look more to a finish mower or a flail or batwing rather than a rotary cutter. Depends I guess how nice you want the finished product to be - but if you're not running animals on it then you're mowing it to look nice......if you borrow/rent a rotary cutter for the first few passes, then a finish mower will maintain it thereafter. You can run a much wider finish mower - if you have ruts the tractor needs to go slow, so you want to cut a wider area if you can. Also, a bigger machine (MX, M) will ride much nicer over ruts.