Thanks for the info. I probably have about 50 pines that I'll be cutting down. Most of them are in the 4"-6" diameter, but a few are closer to 10". I just bought a property where a pond was dug years ago and the dirt piled in three places. Over time, the pines grew up in the dirt piles. I want to get the pines out and use the dirt for a little fill and grading in a few low spots. I'm not looking for a quick weekend completion. This will be an ongoing project.How many is "a lot"? Is it plausible to rent a machine to do them all in a couple days, then buy a BX without a backhoe? Do you have other tasks for the backhoe?
I haven't had a BX backhoe, but I have had a small mini-ex, which most people will say is more capable than the BX. It can dig stumps, but it's very slow going. I'd do it for a couple, but I'd get pretty tired of it if there were a lot. A bigger machine will do them dramatically faster - instead of carefully working around the stump breaking the roots one by one, then slowly rolling it out, you can just put the bucket on the stump and pull.
If you're looking for a weekend hobby for a few years, then yes. If you just need the job done, I'd seriously consider renting a bigger machine (or hiring a guy with a machine who does it all for you in one go).
Thanks for the reply and the tip.It will do ANYTHING you want it to!! However - a mans gotta know his limitations! ( Clint Eastwood)
It will do it a small bite at a time !
I have removed many stumps - depending on tree type it will be fine, make sure you have a sawsall or other root cutting device.
I am of the opinion that it is better to buy once - cry once than to rent several times!
That sounds like a good plan. ThxPines have shallow roots. If you cut them tall 5-6-7' up (leverage), you may be able to pull them out of the ground using the backhoe. maybe a footish off the base of the stump you could dig around too break some roots, maybe a bucket deep, then use the bucket on top and shake the tree to break more deeper roots
HAHAHA Not mine!Pines have shallow roots.