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Forestry Attachments | Forge Claw
Forestry attachments turn a single base machine into a full land-clearing crew. Mulchers grind standing timber into ground-level chips. Grapples stack and sort logs in seconds. Tree shears drop hardwoods without a chain saw leaving the cab. Whether you're cutting firebreaks in the western U.S., reclaiming overgrown pasture in the Midwest, or clearing right-of-way for utility lines across the Southeast, these attachments do the work faster and with fewer people on the ground. One carrier, one operator, and the right attachment — that's how contractors clear land profitably today.
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Portable Electric Salamander Heater | 15KW | 240V 3-Phase | 51,195 BTU/Hour | Fostoria
Overview When your jobsite needs serious heating power that won't quit, the Fostoria Portable Electric Salamander FES-1524-3E delivers exactly wha...
View full details15KW Portable Electric Salamander Heater | 240V Single Phase | 51,195 BTU/Hr | Fan-Forced Heat | Fostoria
Overview The Fostoria Portable Electric Salamander delivers serious heating power where you need it most. This 15KW electric heater pumps out 51,1...
View full detailsPortable Electric Salamander Heater | 10KW | 240V Single Phase | 34,130 BTU | Fostoria
Overview When you need reliable electric heating for construction sites, workshops, garages, or outdoor work areas, the Fostoria Portable Electric...
View full detailsElectric Infrared Heater for Industrial Facilities | 3000W | 240V | 10,239 BTU | Stainless Steel | Fostoria
Overview When you need reliable, efficient heating for your workspace, workshop, or outdoor job site, the Fostoria Electric Infrared Heater delive...
View full detailsIndustrial Infrared Heater | 3000W | 240V | 10,239 BTU | Fostoria
Overview The Fostoria OCH57-240V-CE electric infrared heater delivers professional-grade radiant heating for workshops, garages, construction site...
View full detailsElectric Infrared Heater for Industrial Heating | 3000W | 208V | 10,239 BTU | Fostoria
Overview When you need reliable, efficient heating for workshops, warehouses, outdoor work areas, or large indoor spaces, the Fostoria Electric In...
View full detailsFloor Sander | Cam Locking System | Red Rubber Drum | 1.5 HP Motor | Essex
Overview When you need professional-grade floor sanding results that match what the pros deliver, this 1.5 HP Floor Sander from Essex delivers the...
View full detailsWalk-Behind Stump Grinder | 13 HP Honda GX390 Engine | Swivel Action | Dosko
Overview Stump grinding doesn't have to be a back-breaking, time-consuming ordeal anymore. The Dosko Swivel Stump Grinder with 13 HP Honda GX390 e...
View full details13 HP Walk-Behind Stump Grinder | Self-Propelled |Honda GX390 Engine | Professional Grade | Compact Design | Dosko
Overview The Dosko 337 Stump Grinder brings professional-grade performance to tight spaces where larger machines simply can't reach. Built by Dosk...
View full detailsBrush Chipper | 4-Inch Capacity | Honda GX390 Engine | American Built | Dosko
Overview Professional tree service crews and landscaping contractors know that efficient brush disposal can make or break job profitability. The Do...
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Portable Radiant Heater for Job Site | 45,000 BTU/hr | Propane Powered | 900 sq ft Coverage | DEWALT
Portable Radiant Heater for Job Site | 45,000 BTU/hr | Propane Powered | 900 sq ft Coverage | DEWALT
Overview When you're working on a job site without electrical power and need reliable heat to keep your crew productive, the DEWALT DXH45LP Portab...
View full detailsPortable Radiant Heater for Construction Equipment | 12K BTU | Propane | Cordless | 1,700 sq ft | DEWALT
Overview When you need reliable heat that goes wherever your work takes you, the DEWALT DXH12B Portable Radiant Heater delivers powerful performan...
View full detailsDEWALT Forced Air Heater for Job Sites | 50K/90K BTU | Propane | 2,000 Sq Ft Coverage | Quiet Burner Technology | DEWALT
Overview When your job site needs serious heating power that won't disrupt workflow, the DEWALT DXH90FAV Forced Air Heater delivers professional-g...
View full detailsForced Air Heater | Space Heater for Job Sites | 35K-65K BTU | Propane | Quiet Burner Technology | DEWALT
Overview When job site temperatures drop and productivity suffers, the DEWALT DXH65FAV forced air heater steps in to keep your crew comfortable an...
View full detailsForced Air Heater for Construction Sites | Space Heater for Job Sites | 40,000 BTU | Propane | 800 sq ft Coverage | DEWALT
Overview The DEWALT DXH40FA Forced Air Heater delivers serious heating power for professionals who need reliable warmth on demanding job sites. Wi...
View full detailsPortable Propane Forced Air Heater | Space Heater | 125K-170K BTU | Quiet Burner Technology | 4,000 Sq Ft Coverage | DEWALT
Overview When you need serious heat for large commercial and industrial spaces, this forced air heater delivers professional-grade performance tha...
View full detailsPortable Forced Air Heater | Space Heater | 110K-150K BTU | Propane | Quiet Burner Technology | DEWALT
Overview When construction deadlines won't wait for warmer weather, the DEWALT DXH150FAV forced air heater delivers the professional-grade heat ou...
View full detailsPortable Space Heater | Commercial Forced Air Heater | 125K BTU | Propane | Quiet Burner Technology | DEWALT
Overview When cold weather threatens to shut down your job site, the DEWALT DXH125FAV forced air heater keeps your crew productive and comfortable...
View full detailsPortable Space Heater | Cordless Forced Air Heater | 27K-68K BTU | Propane Powered | Battery Operation | DEWALT
Overview When you need serious heating power that goes where your work takes you, the DEWALT DXH70CFAV Cordless Forced Air Heater changes everythi...
View full detailsHydraulic Hammer Stand for Hydraulic Breakers | Heavy-Gauge Steel | Protective Arms | Star Industries
Overview When you're working with hydraulic hammers on active job sites, the difference between proper storage and makeshift solutions can cost yo...
View full detailsSkid Steer Disc Mulcher Attachment – Heavy-Duty Land Clearing and Forestry Work
Overview Land clearing, brush management, and forestry work demand attachments that can handle serious cutting capacity without slowing you down. T...
View full detailsForestry Winch Attachment | 15,000 lb Pulling Capacity | Hydraulic Driven | Steel Construction
Overview orestry winch attachment with 15,000 lb hydraulic pulling capacity is designed for skidding logs, pulling trees, and clearing heavy brus...
View full detailsWhat Are Forestry Attachments and Why Do Contractors Rely on Them?
Forestry attachments are hydraulic- or PTO-powered tools that mount to heavy equipment for clearing, cutting, mulching, and managing trees, brush, and vegetation. These attachments serve land-clearing, logging, and property-maintenance operations across every U.S. region.
The core advantage is platform versatility. One skid steer, excavator, or tractor accepts multiple forestry attachment types — eliminating the cost of owning dedicated single-purpose machines for each task.
What Types of Work Do Forestry Attachments Perform?
Forestry attachments perform 7 primary tasks: mulching, tree felling, log handling, brush cutting, stump removal, delimbing, and skidding. Each task corresponds to a specific attachment subtype and real-world clearing scenario.
- Mulching standing timber and brush for site development — a forestry mulcher on a 90+ GPM carrier clears 1 to 3 acres per day depending on vegetation density
- Felling and accumulating trees for selective thinning and timber harvest
- Grappling and sorting logs for trailer loading and debris cleanup after storms
- Cutting overgrown brush and saplings along utility right-of-way corridors
- Grinding stumps below grade for immediate site grading and replanting
Which Industries Use Forestry Attachments Most?
7 industries account for the majority of forestry attachment demand: construction site prep, utility right-of-way maintenance, municipal forestry, agriculture and ranching, timber and logging, wildfire management, and commercial landscaping.
- Construction contractors clear lots and grade sites before foundation work
- Utility companies maintain vegetation setbacks along power lines and pipelines
- Municipal forestry departments manage urban tree canopies and storm debris
- Ranchers reclaim overgrown pasture and fence lines
- Wildfire mitigation crews create fuel breaks in western U.S. pine and chaparral zones
- Timber operators fell, delimb, and forward harvested logs to roadside landings
What Types of Forestry Attachments Are Available?
Forestry attachments fall into 7 core categories: mulchers, grapples, brush cutters, tree shears, stump grinders, felling heads, and winches. Each category addresses a specific stage of vegetation management from standing timber to finished ground.
What Is a Forestry Mulcher and When Should You Use One?
A forestry mulcher processes standing trees and brush into ground-level mulch chips using a high-speed rotating drum or disc. Drum-style mulchers use fixed carbide teeth or replaceable carbide tips and handle material up to 6 to 18 inches in diameter. Disc-style mulchers use knife or blade systems and excel at higher-volume throughput in lighter material.
- Cutting widths range from 48 to 80 inches depending on carrier size
- Compact units require 20 to 28 GPM hydraulic flow; full-size skid steer units require 30 to 50+ GPM
- Primary applications: land clearing, right-of-way maintenance, invasive species removal, firebreak construction
What Are Forestry Grapples Used For?
Forestry grapples grip, lift, and position logs, brush piles, and debris using hydraulic clamping jaws. 3 grapple types serve distinct tasks: log grapples for sorting and loading, brush grapples for loose vegetation and slash piles, and rotating grapples for precise placement at variable angles.
- Jaw opening widths range from 36 to 72 inches
- Grapple weight ranges from 400 to 2,500 pounds depending on capacity class
- Applications include log sorting, trailer loading, brush pile management, and storm debris cleanup
What Is the Difference Between Brush Cutters and Forestry Mulchers?
Brush cutters mow standing vegetation at ground level using a rotary blade system; forestry mulchers process trees and brush into mulch chips using a drum or disc rotor. Brush cutters handle grass, weeds, and saplings up to 2 to 4 inches in diameter. Forestry mulchers handle material up to 6 to 18 inches in diameter.
The selection rule is straightforward. Overgrown fields and light brush call for a brush cutter. Standing timber and dense woody brush require a forestry mulcher.
When Do You Need Tree Shears or Felling Heads?
Tree shears cut standing trees at the base using a single or double hydraulic blade, handling trunk diameters from 8 to 20+ inches. Felling heads cut and accumulate multiple stems before laying them directionally. Both attachments serve selective thinning, timber harvesting, and trail construction.
Tree shears mount to excavators and skid steers. Felling heads typically mount to excavators and dedicated forestry carriers where boom reach and accumulating capacity increase harvesting speed.
What Other Forestry Attachment Types Should You Consider?
6 additional attachment types complete a full forestry operation: stump grinders, log splitters, forestry winches, delimbers, bark peelers, and timber trailers.
- Stump grinders mount to skid steers and excavators to remove stumps 6 to 24 inches below grade
- Log splitters operate via PTO or hydraulic power on tractors and skid steers — processing rounds up to 24 inches in diameter
- Forestry winches and skidding winches attach to tractors and skid steers for pulling felled trees to landing areas
- Delimbers strip branches from felled stems at processing speeds of 40 to 80 trees per hour
- Timber trailers and forwarding trailers transport logs from stump to roadside behind tractors or dedicated carriers
What Equipment Is Compatible with Forestry Attachments?
Forestry attachments mount to skid steers, compact track loaders, excavators, tractors, wheel loaders, backhoe loaders, and dedicated forestry carriers. Compatibility depends on 3 factors: hydraulic capacity, machine weight, and coupler system.
Which Skid Steer and CTL Models Support Forestry Attachments?
Skid steers and compact track loaders rated at 30+ GPM hydraulic flow, 3,000+ PSI operating pressure, and 7,500 to 12,000+ pounds operating weight support forestry mulchers and heavy grapples. Standard-flow machines (20 to 28 GPM) operate lighter brush cutters and small grapples.
- High-flow forestry mulchers require 30 to 45+ GPM and 3,000 to 4,000 PSI
- Forestry-rated carriers typically weigh 9,000 to 12,000+ pounds for stability under mulching loads
- Quick-attach mounting is standard across skid steer and CTL platforms
Can You Run Forestry Attachments on Excavators?
Excavators accept forestry mulching heads, grapples, tree shears, and felling heads via pin-on or hydraulic coupler connections on the boom. Machine weight class determines attachment size and capacity.
- Mini excavators (3,500 to 14,000 pounds) operate small grapples and brush cutters
- Mid-size excavators (14,000 to 40,000 pounds) run mulching heads and tree shears
- Full-size excavators (40,000+ pounds) power heavy felling heads and processing heads
- Excavators provide elevated reach and sloped-terrain capability that ground-level carriers cannot match
What Tractor Specs Are Required for 3-Point and PTO Forestry Attachments?
Tractor-mounted forestry attachments connect via 3-point hitch (Category 1, 2, or 3) or PTO shaft at 540 or 1,000 RPM. PTO horsepower requirements range from 25 HP for light brush mowers to 100+ HP for heavy-duty stump grinders and firewood processors.
- Compact tractors (25 to 50 HP) support light brush cutters and small log splitters
- Utility tractors (50 to 100 HP) handle mid-range forestry mowers, winches, and grapples
- Agricultural tractors (100+ HP) run heavy-duty stump grinders, firewood processors, and large PTO mulchers
How Do You Choose the Right Forestry Attachment for Your Machine?
What Hydraulic Flow and Pressure Do Forestry Attachments Require?
Hydraulic flow (GPM) and operating pressure (PSI) are the 2 specifications that determine whether an attachment operates at full capacity on a given carrier. Undersized hydraulic output reduces rotor speed, clamping force, and cutting throughput.
- Brush cutters: 14 to 25 GPM at 2,500 to 3,500 PSI
- Forestry mulchers (compact): 20 to 28 GPM at 3,000 to 3,500 PSI
- Forestry mulchers (full-size): 30 to 50+ GPM at 3,000 to 4,500 PSI
- Grapples: 8 to 20 GPM at 2,500 to 3,500 PSI
- Tree shears: 15 to 35 GPM at 3,000 to 4,000 PSI
How Does Machine Weight Affect Forestry Attachment Performance?
Machine operating weight must exceed the attachment weight by a ratio that maintains carrier stability, traction, and safe lifting capacity. 3 weight classes define general compatibility thresholds.
- Under 10,000 pounds: light brush cutters, small grapples, compact mulchers
- 10,000 to 25,000 pounds: full-size mulchers, tree shears, heavy grapples
- 25,000+ pounds: felling heads, processing heads, excavator-mounted mulching heads
Which Coupler or Mount System Do You Need?
4 coupler standards cover forestry attachment mounting: universal skid steer quick attach, direct pin-on, 3-point hitch, and dedicated OEM couplers. Skid steer quick attach is the most common interface for mulchers, grapples, and brush cutters. Excavator attachments use pin-on or hydraulic couplers sized to the boom's pin spacing.
What Performance and ROI Can You Expect from Forestry Attachments?
How Many Acres Can Forestry Attachments Clear Per Hour?
A forestry mulcher on a high-flow skid steer or compact track loader clears 0.5 to 1.5 acres per hour in moderate vegetation and 0.25 to 0.5 acres per hour in dense standing timber. Brush cutters cover 1 to 3 acres per hour in light overgrowth. Actual rates vary by stem diameter, density, terrain slope, and operator experience.
Are Forestry Attachments Worth the Investment for Small Contractors?
A forestry mulcher attachment replaces a 3- to 5-person manual clearing crew and eliminates hauling, burning, and chipping costs. Land-clearing contractors typically recover the attachment purchase price within 50 to 150 billable acres. Cost per acre drops from $1,500 to $3,000+ with manual methods to $400 to $1,200 with a mulcher attachment, depending on vegetation density.
Browse Forge Claw's Complete Forestry Attachment Selection
Forge Claw carries professional-grade forestry attachments built for the hardest clearing work you'll face. Every mulcher, grapple, tree shear, and brush cutter in this collection is selected for durability under continuous heavy use. You get expert support from a team that knows these machines — and equipment financing is available for qualified buyers.
What Makes Forge Claw's Selection Right for Professional Use?
Every forestry attachment in this collection meets commercial-duty construction and performance standards. Forge Claw's product team evaluates steel grade, rotor quality, hydraulic component ratings, and tooth or blade material before any attachment earns a spot here. You're choosing from equipment that's already been vetted for real jobsite conditions.
What Other Products Do Contractors Pair with Forestry Equipment Attachments?
Contractors regularly combine forestry attachments with complementary products to expand capability and reduce changeovers.
Land Clearing Attachments
Operators often combine tree-cutting forestry tools with Land Clearing Attachments like brush cutters and stump grinders to complete full-scale site preparation projects. Both attachment categories mount to the same excavators and skid steers, allowing contractors to tackle vegetation removal and ground clearing with a single machine platform.
Landscaping Attachments
Property maintenance crews frequently pair forestry mulchers with Landscaping Attachments such as aerators and brush mowers for comprehensive grounds management. This combination enables efficient transition from heavy vegetation clearing to detailed landscape finishing work using compatible carrier machines.
Frequently Asked Questions About Forestry Attachments
What Equipment Is Compatible with Forestry Clearing Attachments?
Forestry attachments mount to skid steers, compact track loaders, excavators, tractors, wheel loaders, and dedicated forestry carriers using quick-attach, pin-on, or 3-point hitch connections.
Compatibility depends on 3 machine specifications: hydraulic flow (GPM), operating pressure (PSI), and operating weight. Skid steer mulchers require 30 to 50+ GPM at 3,000 to 4,500 PSI on carriers weighing 7,500 to 12,000+ pounds. Tractor-mounted PTO attachments require 25 to 100+ horsepower depending on attachment type. Excavator attachments match to boom pin spacing and machine weight class — mini excavators handle light grapples, while full-size excavators run felling heads and heavy mulching heads.
What Jobs and Applications Do Forestry Attachments Handle?
Forestry attachments handle land clearing, right-of-way maintenance, wildfire fuel reduction, timber harvesting, stump removal, pasture reclamation, storm debris cleanup, and invasive species management.
Each attachment type addresses a specific task. Forestry mulchers grind standing trees and brush to ground-level mulch. Grapples sort, stack, and load logs and slash piles. Tree shears fell standing timber up to 20+ inches in diameter. Brush cutters mow overgrown fields and light saplings. Stump grinders remove stumps below grade for immediate regrading. Winches skid felled trees from stump to landing. The full range covers every stage from standing timber to finished, cleared ground.
What Maintenance Do Forestry Attachments Require?
Forestry attachments require daily inspections of teeth, blades, hydraulic hoses, and bearing assemblies — plus scheduled replacement of wear parts based on operating hours and material type.
Forestry mulcher teeth are the highest-wear component. Carbide teeth on drum-style mulchers last 50 to 200 operating hours depending on soil contact and material hardness. Operators inspect teeth before each shift and replace worn or missing teeth immediately to prevent rotor damage. Hydraulic hoses and fittings require inspection for leaks and abrasion weekly. Bearing grease points need daily lubrication. Grapple cylinders and pivot pins require grease every 8 to 10 operating hours. Blade sharpening on brush cutters occurs every 20 to 40 hours.
What Safety Precautions Should Operators Follow with Forestry Attachments?
Operators maintain a minimum 300-foot exclusion zone around active forestry mulching operations to prevent injury from thrown debris, and all personnel wear ANSI-rated eye protection, hearing protection, and high-visibility clothing.
Carrier machines operating forestry mulchers require front and side polycarbonate screen guards or forestry cab packages to protect operators from ricocheting material. Operators verify hydraulic connections and coupler locks before every use. Tree shear and felling head operators confirm the planned fall direction and clear the drop zone before each cut. Equipment operates on stable, assessed ground — slopes exceeding manufacturer limits require alternative methods. Lockout/tagout procedures apply during all maintenance and tooth replacement tasks.
How Long Do Forestry Attachments Last and Is Ownership Better Than Rental?
Commercial-grade forestry mulchers last 2,000 to 5,000+ operating hours with proper maintenance; grapples and tree shears last 4,000 to 8,000+ hours due to fewer high-wear components.
Rental rates for forestry mulcher attachments range from $1,500 to $4,000+ per week depending on size and region. Contractors billing 200+ hours per year typically reach ownership payback within 12 to 24 months compared to ongoing rental costs. Ownership eliminates scheduling delays, ensures attachment availability during peak season, and allows operators to maintain consistent tooth sharpness and calibration. Equipment financing spreads the capital cost across the productive life of the attachment.
Browse Forge Claw's full selection of professional-grade forestry attachments — equipment financing available for qualified buyers.