If y’all can tolerate another “newbie wanting to buy a tractor” thread, I could really use some advice. My wife and I have just purchased 27 acres in east Texas. After decades of suburbia we are planning on retiring there soon and I’m definitely feeling the need for something orange. The options and features are dizzying and before I even go to my nearby dealer, I’d like to better understand my options.
Some additional information on my situation and intentions that might be useful:
Thank you to those of you who have endured reading all of this. I welcome any insights that you can offer to help me organize my thinking.
Some additional information on my situation and intentions that might be useful:
- About 14 of the 27 acres are used by my neighbor to graze his cattle. We have a deal where he maintains that area and I let him use the land. So, effectively, I don’t have to worry about those 14 acres. (Unless he changes his mind or moves or whatever, of course.)
- I have a one-acre lake and whatever solution I end up with will need to support a boom-type cutter to cut the embankments that are unsuitable to drive on. Having a boom mower that’s also capable of trimming trees and high shrubs would be nice, too, but I recognize that would require more horsepower (at least 60 hp for the bush hog flail head boom mower that caught my eye).
- I have a 60” ZT mower that does an okay job, especially in tight areas where a tractor would be too bulky, but it still seems pretty slow going with some of the larger areas I cut. Especially if I’ve been traveling and skipped mowing for a week or two. When that happens, the ZT mower is not quite up to the job. Some of the areas are somewhat rutted, too, which is painful and slow in the ZT mower. So, I also would like to end up with a wide rotary cutter to pull behind the tractor for much faster cutting, especially when it’s a bit overgrown. I don’t think that I need a center mounted mower for the tractor since the ZT mower seems to be suitable for that role. I’m new at this, though, so I may be wrong.
- I’m sure I’m going to be trenching, tilling the rutted areas, moving dirt and gravel around, digging post holes and moving posts for fences, moving/planting trees and shrubs, smoothing out a long driveway, etc. So, I definitely will want a backhoe and a front blade.
- This is east Texas, so snow doesn’t enter the picture, to speak of.
- I’m pretty sure I want a cab and not a ROPS, primarily because of the scorching heat around here.
- I’m nearly 60 and I want to save wear and tear on my body. I’m fortunate that I can spend the money on various attachments to make life easier, so while I’m not wanting to go insane with the spending, I don’t want to pinch pennies on an underpowered tractor and regret it for years to come when the attachment I want to buy or rent is too much for my wimpy tractor to handle. That said, there’s no reason to buy a tractor that’s bigger, more difficult to manage, and more expensive to maintain, just for the sake of having it.
Thank you to those of you who have endured reading all of this. I welcome any insights that you can offer to help me organize my thinking.