Hi Folks,
I made a similar post over in TBN, but I'd be curious to get some different viewpoints. After talking to some neighbors and the local dealers were primarily looking at orange tractors / equipment. If you saw the thread there this will be a little repetitive, but we've narrowed in on a few options.
The info:
Property:
113 acres in Central VT, relatively hilly, approximately 4 acres of "homesite" 30 acres of pasture, the rest are forest
The home site is about 1500ft from the road, up a hill
Goals:
Non-goals:
I do not want to hay, the land is too hilly and the pastures are too small to make it reasonable. With the high-compost needs of the no-till gardens importing hay is our preferred option.
Budget:
Budget is very loose. This doesn't necessarily need to justify itself in cost, but I do hate owning things that just sit there. I would rather lean on having fewer pieces of equipment I'm pushing a bit than a squadron of specialized ones.
General Desires:
The Current Thoughts:
The most obvious tractor for us seems to be a L6060, loaded with plenty of ballast. It's capable of doing everything on the list, even if not perfect for each. Larger would force us in to geared tractors which are not nearly as useful for most of our chores, and would be much less nice for doing trail maintenance. Larger tractors are also worse for maintaining the health of the pastures. Smaller and we can't effectively run the no-till-drill, or mow with larger mowers.
The things it's lacking though:
Moving between the loader and the front snowblower would be an absolute mess given the daily bedding pack management for the cattle.
The loader itself is not the *best* for doing a lot of round bale moving. Capable, certainly not as quick as e.g. a track loader.
We could move snow management to something smaller, e.g. a LX3310 (or whatever the new models are coming out in 2023). This might be nice for mowing the "yard", and might save us from buying a zero-turn. It would also be nice for my wife to drive on occasion, especially for lighter work in the gardens. The actual process of attaching the snowblower to a LX is much simpler (and smaller) than the Grand Ls, and it would be reasonable to just leave it on all season.
We could also buy a compact track loader, It would probably be ideal for the work in the barn. I don't want to drive it around much elsewhere on the property though, between the hills and the damage to the pasture it would mostly just sit during the summer.
I made a similar post over in TBN, but I'd be curious to get some different viewpoints. After talking to some neighbors and the local dealers were primarily looking at orange tractors / equipment. If you saw the thread there this will be a little repetitive, but we've narrowed in on a few options.
The info:
Property:
113 acres in Central VT, relatively hilly, approximately 4 acres of "homesite" 30 acres of pasture, the rest are forest
The home site is about 1500ft from the road, up a hill
Goals:
- 1-4 acres of no-till vegetable gardens, so primarily some loader work managing compost
- trail maintenance, including clearing a small amount of forest for a small shooting range
- snow management for the long drive
- driveway maintenance
- 30-ish dexter cattle, managing a bedding pack for the winter months, dealing with round bales
- The pack requires aeration as well
- Having the availability of a backhoe attachment would be nice for cleaning the pack in the spring, but we might also just rent a compact excavator for the job.
- As a small note here, we're building an open-faced hoop barn, so operating a tractor in the barn will be fairly straightforward.
- pasture maintenance, mowing on occasion, using a no-till drill for maintaining the paddocks, spreading manure / compost
- general property maintenance
Non-goals:
I do not want to hay, the land is too hilly and the pastures are too small to make it reasonable. With the high-compost needs of the no-till gardens importing hay is our preferred option.
Budget:
Budget is very loose. This doesn't necessarily need to justify itself in cost, but I do hate owning things that just sit there. I would rather lean on having fewer pieces of equipment I'm pushing a bit than a squadron of specialized ones.
General Desires:
- Vermont is cold, and the snowiest state in the US, I want a cab on pretty much anything I'll own.
- I also very much want whatever tractor is snowblowing the drive to have a front-mounted blower. I am aware this costs more, it is worth it for me.
- I am heavily biased towards sticking with HST transmissions. A lot of what there is to do is loader work. The simplicity of operation also is appealing given the hilly nature of the property, especially if other members of the family end up using the tractor.
The Current Thoughts:
The most obvious tractor for us seems to be a L6060, loaded with plenty of ballast. It's capable of doing everything on the list, even if not perfect for each. Larger would force us in to geared tractors which are not nearly as useful for most of our chores, and would be much less nice for doing trail maintenance. Larger tractors are also worse for maintaining the health of the pastures. Smaller and we can't effectively run the no-till-drill, or mow with larger mowers.
The things it's lacking though:
Moving between the loader and the front snowblower would be an absolute mess given the daily bedding pack management for the cattle.
The loader itself is not the *best* for doing a lot of round bale moving. Capable, certainly not as quick as e.g. a track loader.
We could move snow management to something smaller, e.g. a LX3310 (or whatever the new models are coming out in 2023). This might be nice for mowing the "yard", and might save us from buying a zero-turn. It would also be nice for my wife to drive on occasion, especially for lighter work in the gardens. The actual process of attaching the snowblower to a LX is much simpler (and smaller) than the Grand Ls, and it would be reasonable to just leave it on all season.
We could also buy a compact track loader, It would probably be ideal for the work in the barn. I don't want to drive it around much elsewhere on the property though, between the hills and the damage to the pasture it would mostly just sit during the summer.
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