marne
ArboristSite Operative
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2014
- Messages
- 148
- Reaction score
- 56
Usually when doing stumps it's common sense to grind and go, which I do in 99% of all cases.
But sometimes when doing jobs for better situated customers, there is need for leaving not such a mess, or other customers ask for grading/grinding whole parts of their gardens.
For sure no problem grinding, but leaving a prepared bed for seeding lawn? No way with a grinder, maybe after extensive raking with varying results and aching arms.
After researching, I found those stone burier attachments for skid steers and tractors.
They seem to do a decent grading job and they seem to indeed bury stones.
No doubt they will not bury several ft³ chips from a giant stump on 10ft², but what about those machines and grindings in general?
The intention is to spread the chips over a larger surface around where the stump was and then to level it with such a device in several passes.
I don't expect pitch black soil in the end but something you can sell.
Anybody ever tried it?
Maybe a little smaller but like this:
Many thanks!
But sometimes when doing jobs for better situated customers, there is need for leaving not such a mess, or other customers ask for grading/grinding whole parts of their gardens.
For sure no problem grinding, but leaving a prepared bed for seeding lawn? No way with a grinder, maybe after extensive raking with varying results and aching arms.
After researching, I found those stone burier attachments for skid steers and tractors.
They seem to do a decent grading job and they seem to indeed bury stones.
No doubt they will not bury several ft³ chips from a giant stump on 10ft², but what about those machines and grindings in general?
The intention is to spread the chips over a larger surface around where the stump was and then to level it with such a device in several passes.
I don't expect pitch black soil in the end but something you can sell.
Anybody ever tried it?
Maybe a little smaller but like this:
Many thanks!