As someone above mentioned, if the ground has been wet, then stay off the turf and give it a few days to dry out. Wet turf is like quicksand, you never know where it is, and it will grab you when you least expect it. My little BX23S doesn't like wet ground and it will slip and slide when it loses traction. Before I had lots of experience with my new tractor it started sliding in the backyard. I dropped the bucket, got off, and waited till the ground was dry and firm before I went back to retrieve it. My wife thought it strange where I parked it, and I never mentioned to her why it was there. No need to get her more worried about me on the tractor than she already is. Twenty years later, she still doesn't like the tractor depending on what I am doing. It all reverts to when we were building the home and I overturned a very large Minneapolis Moline tractor, loader, backhoe. It originally was a cemetery machine and it could dig 18' deep holes to bury caskets at that depth, next one was at 12' and then at 6'. It was the height of the hoe that kept the machine from rolling over more than it did. It also took a lot of effort to right it again.