As others have said, a landscape rake would work far better. We had a bad windstorm go through a campground where i worked. It left a real mess. We went in with an excavator, and a backhoe to clean up the large stuff, but smaller branches and twigs were like a carpet. We bought a landscape rake from Northern Freight and put it on a small New Holland, and it worked great. We would rake up the debris into piles, and use the backhoe bucket and thumb to pick it, and load it onto a dump truck.Cleaning up my windbreak etc and have tons of little sticks and branches to pick up. Would one of these old hay rakes work to gather them in a pile? View attachment 5975
Cleaning up my windbreak etc and have tons of little sticks and branches to pick up. Would one of these old hay rakes work to gather them in a pile? View attachment 5975
Those old dump rakes are very common yard art items in the rural parts of my area. Couple hundred bucks is not bad for good sized yard art which is the worst result if you buy it and it doen's pick up your sticks. Just park it and look at it then, and be prepared to move it back and forth when you mow! FWIW a decent lawn tractor or mower will easily pull it with a light chain - no large tractor required.Cleaning up my windbreak etc and have tons of little sticks and branches to pick up. Would one of these old hay rakes work to gather them in a pile? View attachment 5975
Called a dump rake in my area, they were sitting all over. I never saw one used, but I imagine they raked the hay int a windrow, then used a hay loader to put it on a wagon. I cut one up when I was young and used the steel to build a trailer.
I am going against the landscape rake guys because I tried it in my hayfields. The experiment mostly was a mess. The grass in the hayfields was short but mostly bunched up in pile and the landscape rake did not gather as many of the sicks as I had hoped it would. If I only would have went a short distance it may have worked better, but I had to go several hundred feet. Luckily, I only borrowed the rake. Mark.Cleaning up my windbreak etc and have tons of little sticks and branches to pick up. Would one of these old hay rakes work to gather them in a pile? View attachment 5975
I had the same issue you do. I bought a landscape rake from a farm store and that works pretty good if you go different directions on it. I think the dump rake would leave a lot of branchesCleaning up my windbreak etc and have tons of little sticks and branches to pick up. Would one of these old hay rakes work to gather them in a pile? View attachment 5975
For $25, I'd experiment. Not for $225. There's a reason it's still for sale.I might, except I don't have one. Neighbor is selling one for $225 and not sure I want to experiment with that much money. Although I could use it as yard decoration. Ironically, I spent the 70's cutting up all of Grandpa's junk machinery, now people want that stuff to display. He had one of these rakes too.
Maybe a landscape rake from the farm store would work. I just know my back can't bend over enough times to pick that stuff up.
I think that cheap, I will not part with my dump rake or horse drawn mower at any price.I might, except I don't have one. Neighbor is selling one for $225 and not sure I want to experiment with that much money. Although I could use it as yard decoration. Ironically, I spent the 70's cutting up all of Grandpa's junk machinery, now people want that stuff to display. He had one of these rakes too.
Maybe a landscape rake from the farm store would work. I just know my back can't bend over enough times to pick that stuff up.
I think you're replying to an old thread here. But even so, I might offer a reply and counter-point: Rowse still makes dump rakes (though I've only ever seen one in-person, and that was while I was down in Texas for work).I think that cheap, I will not part with my dump rake or horse drawn mower at any price.
Like land, they are not making them anymore, what you got is all there is.
X2 on the dump rakeI think branches would get tangled up and never dump… or take so
Long to get out from under, it would just spread them out again.
You’ll have better luck with this, if you can find one.
Cleaning up my windbreak etc and have tons of little sticks and branches to pick up. Would one of these old hay rakes work to gather them in a pile? View attachment 5975I still have Dad's rake, some how it missed the cutting torch. Can you just try it, if it works then buy it. I guess it depends on the person that has it. I would think if there was weeds to pick up at the same time it will pick up the little sticks also. I let someone take a sprig tooth harrow about 6 months ago to try it on a horse arena. Still waiting to get paid. Stan
We sell tractor parts! We have the parts you need to repair your tractor - the right parts. Our low prices and years of research make us your best choice when you need parts. Shop Online Today.
Copyright © 1997-2025 Yesterday's Tractor Co.
All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of any part of this website, including design and content, without written permission is strictly prohibited. Trade Marks and Trade Names contained and used in this Website are those of others, and are used in this Website in a descriptive sense to refer to the products of others. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy TRADEMARK DISCLAIMER: Tradenames and Trademarks referred to within Yesterday's Tractor Co. products and within the Yesterday's Tractor Co. websites are the property of their respective trademark holders. None of these trademark holders are affiliated with Yesterday's Tractor Co., our products, or our website nor are we sponsored by them. John Deere and its logos are the registered trademarks of the John Deere Corporation. Agco, Agco Allis, White, Massey Ferguson and their logos are the registered trademarks of AGCO Corporation. Case, Case-IH, Farmall, International Harvester, New Holland and their logos are registered trademarks of CNH Global N.V.
Yesterday's Tractors - Antique Tractor Headquarters
Website Accessibility Policy