2. Skid Steer / Compact Track Loader: John Deere 333G
If you had to sum up a skid steer in a single word, it would be power. The 333G is the largest skid steer John Deere makes, and for heavily wooded, overgrown properties, it can be a game-changer.
What it excels at:
- Clearing overgrown fields packed with autumn olive and invasive brush
- Running a hydraulic mulcher head for hours on end
- Moving heavy logs, stumps, and large material
- Operating comfortably on hilly terrain thanks to a low center of gravity and wide tracks
Stability on slopes: One of the most underappreciated advantages of a compact track loader over a tractor is the sense of security on uneven ground. Tractors, even wide ones, have a relatively high center of gravity and a narrower footprint, which can feel unsettling on steep hillsides. A skid steer with wide rubber tracks sits low and planted, even on aggressive slopes.
Visibility: All attachments mount to the front loader, putting everything right in your sightline through the glass door.
Where it falls short:
- Skid steer attachments are hydraulically driven and can be expensive
- High-flow hydraulic systems require beefier, costlier attachments
- The machine purchase price is significant, especially at the top of the lineup
- On rough terrain, a wheeled skid steer would struggle
Note: For heavily wooded or overgrown properties, a compact track loader may be the single most productive machine you can own in the first year of property development.