Interesting thread.
Technically “I” own about 2 acres. The family trust owns 68 additional acres that abuts mine on 3 sides, mostly wooded with copious trails and areas that need mowing once or twice a year. We heat half the house with wood and so did my father before he passed.
Wife and I are the only ones who actually live there so I maintain the whole 70 acres. So do I “need” a tractor? Heck, yeah I do. If I only maintained my 2 acres I honestly don’t think I’d need a 47hp L. A B or LX would be more appropriate. The L is too big and heavy for much yard work and certainly too big and heavy for routine lawn mowing. Yeah, I could put a 10’ batwing finish mower behind it to mow the yards but I’d have ruts in the lawns and a lot of weedeating to do after mowing.
For one off stuff where you need a forestry mulcher or mini-ex, renting a large piece of equipment may make sense. For ongoing maintenance of trees, brush, trails, yards, gardens, etc. renting isn’t as attractive or practical.
When I bought a new tractor I went in with a budget, including implements, of $100K. Looked at skid steers, tele-handlers, tractors, ToolCats, mini-ex’s anything and everything. First, defined the one time jobs, then the recurring jobs. Considered the fact that I’m getting old enough that some stuff I used to get by manually doing just ain’t happening going forward, I have limited time because I still work about 50 hours/week, and I have virtually no reliable manual labor aside from my self and my similarly age wife. Ended up buying what was needed. Not what was “cool” at the time or what I could “get by with”: what was needed. Already had an acceptably capable ZTR for the lawns.
There are times it would be nice to have a backhoe but for the $9K it cost when I bought the tractor and limited uses I had for it, renting or hiring out those jobs made more sense. Loader with SSQA to swap between forks, grapple, and bucket was a necessity. Quick attach loader that can come off for mowing tight areas is a big deal for me. At this point I don’t know how people survive without a forklift.
Bottom line for your needs, I’d lean toward a large B or small LX and the suggestion to sit on them and/or rent one for a few days to try it out if you can is good advice, particularly if you don’t have prior tractor experience.
Only problem I had with the dealer was I don’t think they ever fully understood what exactly I had to do with the machine or the topography upon which it had to be done so their recommendation was too small. Fortunately I had enough prior experience with the land and tractors to know that. The local JD dealer was a bad experience. Dealer support is a big deal and not to be overlooked when picking a brand.