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[email protected] September 25th 07 11:10 PM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

I have never owned a riding mower myself so fill me in on what may be
a good choice and let me know what to stay away from.

Thanks.

Clark[_3_] September 25th 07 11:59 PM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
wrote:
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

I have never owned a riding mower myself so fill me in on what may be
a good choice and let me know what to stay away from.

Thanks.


try alt.home.lawn.garden

They can be a little rambunctious but they might have some good advice too.
I just bought a Craftsman but had to return the first one (mower deck height
was to low)
but in the end I got a new one built just two days before I received it.
I favored the shift on the fender and the full pressure oil system because I
have hills too
I think you would want a larger deck because of the acreage.
They have good advice for older equipment too.
the one that I bought:
http://www.sears.com/shc/s/p_10153_12605_07128738000P?filter=Horsepower%7C22+ hp&vName=Lawn+%26+Garden&cName=Lawn+Tractors&sName =Lawn+Tractor+Series&sLevel=2|3
Clark



SteveB September 26th 07 02:08 AM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 

wrote in message
...
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

I have never owned a riding mower myself so fill me in on what may be
a good choice and let me know what to stay away from.

Thanks.


John Deere, Dixon, or Kubota ZTR mower. Get your checkbook out. You get
what you pay for.

Steve



[email protected] September 26th 07 02:29 AM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
snip
try alt.home.lawn.garden


I will repost the thread there.

I favored the shift on the fender and the full pressure oil system because I
have hills too


Thanks for the pressured oil system advise. I had forgotten about that
aspect.

GWB September 26th 07 03:31 AM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
I love my John Deere X340.

Tony Hwang September 26th 07 03:50 AM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
wrote:
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

I have never owned a riding mower myself so fill me in on what may be
a good choice and let me know what to stay away from.

Thanks.

Hi,
I am a John Deere fan.

Joe September 26th 07 04:04 AM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 

wrote:
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

I have never owned a riding mower myself so fill me in on what may be
a good choice and let me know what to stay away from.


FWIW, I've racked up many hours over the years with several models of
Simplicity. Dealer service and parts has always been top notch and
they seem to have an edge over others in snow blowers, maybe because
they re built in Wisconsin. Currently using a 18HP Sunstar hydro with
SB and deck, getting close to 1000 hours on it. The rest of the fleet
is a pair of 13 HP 30" plain mowers. Still have an older 10 HP version
of these that plain wore out after only a decade of use, our spare
parts source. IMO, Deere is OK, but overpriced, Toro is not too bad,
others are dubious designs meant for little flat suburban lawns. HTH

Joe
Thanks.



beecrofter[_2_] September 26th 07 11:16 PM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
On Sep 25, 6:10 pm, wrote:
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

I have never owned a riding mower myself so fill me in on what may be
a good choice and let me know what to stay away from.

Thanks.


gift certificate time


dpb September 26th 07 11:20 PM

Lawnmower suggestions?
 
wrote:
I am looking at giving a gift of a lawnmower to a first time home
purchaser. I can fully remember my first house and how relatives
were very generous in giving us the help we needed in establishing
a nice home. It's now my turn to be generous so hopefully I can get
some first hand knowledge from the people of this group. Here are
the details.

The property is four acres in size and hilly. It is in a northern
climate and has a long driveway.

So.........I need a riding mower that can have a optional snow plow
or blower attached to it. I favor hydrostatic drives over standard
transmissions and because of the hills the mower should have a low
center of gravity.

....

How hilly and how much is required to be mowed? Can have 4A and still
only mow a small area around the house.

Any land other than lawn? Horses, large garden area to cultivate, etc.,
etc., ...

Far too little to go on. If actually serious on the blade/plow thing
other than a scraper blade on a three point, 4W assist will be
invaluable (as it is for any heavy work).

--


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