Or Call us at: (888) 388-6514
Land Clearing Attachments | Forge Claw
Land clearing attachments turn a single machine into a full clearing crew. Forestry mulchers, brush cutters, tree shears, grapples, and stump grinders mount directly to your skid steer, excavator, or tractor — and handle everything from light brush to 14-inch hardwoods. No burn permits. No push-and-pile waste. One operator processes trees, stumps, and undergrowth in a single pass, leaving mulch in place to control erosion. Whether you're prepping residential lots, cutting fire breaks, or reclaiming overgrown pasture, the right attachment decides how fast the work gets done and how much it costs per acre.
Filters
Forestry 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 detailsSkid Steer Tree Puller Attachment
Overview This skid steer tree puller attachment clamps and extracts trees up to 10-1/2 inches in diameter using rigid teeth and heavy tube constr...
View full detailsSkid Steer Root Rake Grapple | Hydraulic Brush & Debris Attachment | 3/8" Steel Tines
Overview This skid steer root rake grapple attachment is built for clearing brush, shrubbery, and storm debris while securely clamping and stacki...
View full detailsGrapple Bucket for Skid Steer Loaders, Dual Cylinder Hydraulic, Heavy-Duty Steel Construction
Overview This skid steer grapple bucket attachment is built for clearing brush, moving logs, and handling rock with dual independent hydraulic gr...
View full detailsWheel Loader Clam Grapple Attachment – Built for Land Clearing and Demolition
Video Overview Overview When you're running a wheel loader and need serious clamping power to handle logs, brush, demolition debris, or scrap met...
View full detailsSkid Steer Brush Cutter Attachment – Heavy-Duty Vegetation Control up to 7 Inches
Overview When you're clearing overgrown fence lines, reclaiming pastureland, or cutting your way through thick brush and saplings, you need ...
View full detailsWheel Loader Clam Grapple Attachment – Severe-Duty Material Handling
Overview When you're moving demolition debris, brush piles, scrap metal, or oversized logs with a wheel loader, you need a grapple that won't quit....
View full detailsUniversal Grapple Adapter for Skid Steer Buckets | Dual Cylinders | Heavy-Duty Steel | Star Industries
Overview The Star Industries Universal Grapple Adapter transforms any existing skid-steer bucket into a powerful grappling tool without requiring ...
View full detailsGrapple Bucket for Skid Steer | 66"-84" | Heavy-Duty Steel | Hydraulic Operation | Star Industries
Overview When you're dealing with brush clearing, debris removal, or handling irregular materials on the job site, you need an attachment that won'...
View full detailsRoot Grapple for Skid Steer | 66"-84" | Independent Hydraulics | Heavy-Duty Steel | Star Industries
Overview When debris cleanup demands serious gripping power, the Star Industries Root Grapple transforms your skid steer into a precision material ...
View full detailsBrush Cutter for Skid Steer | 72" Width | 6" Max Cut | 100 HP Gearbox | Star Industries
Overview When thick brush and dense vegetation stand between you and a finished job, the Star Industries Skid-Steer Brush Cutter Model 195-72 cuts ...
View full detailsSkid Steer Brush Cutter – Heavy-Duty Land Clearing and Vegetation Management
Overview When you're clearing thick brush, overgrown saplings, and tangled vegetation on rugged terrain, you need a machine that won't slow you d...
View full detailsSkid Steer / Compact Tractor Brush Cutter – Heavy-Duty Land Clearing
Overview When you're facing thick brush, overgrown pastures, or tangled undergrowth that stands between you and a finished job, you need equipmen...
View full detailsRoot Grapple Bucket | Mini Skid Steer Attachment | Hydraulic | Independent Tines | 3/8" Steel | 2" x 8" Cylinders | Toro Dingo & Bobcat MT50 Compatible | 36"–48"
Overview When you're dealing with roots, brush piles, rocks, and debris on the job site, you need an attachment that can handle the mess without fi...
View full detailsWhat Are Land Clearing Attachments and Why Do Contractors Rely on Them?
Land clearing attachments are hydraulic-powered implements mounted to skid steers, excavators, and tractors that remove trees, brush, stumps, and undergrowth — replacing manual labor, burn methods, and bulldozer push-and-pile techniques.
What Types of Projects Require Land Clearing Attachments?
Attachment selection changes by project scope and vegetation density. Residential lot clearing typically covers 0.25–2 acres. Commercial site preparation ranges from 5–50 acres. Pipeline corridors and utility right-of-way projects span hundreds of linear miles.
- Residential lot preparation for new construction — 0.25 to 2 acres per site
- Commercial site development and grading preparation — 5 to 50 acres
- Pipeline corridor and transmission line clearing — linear mile segments
- Utility right-of-way maintenance — recurring annual or biannual cycles
- Fire break creation and fuel load reduction — mandated in wildfire-prone regions
- Pasture reclamation and fence line clearing — 10 to 200 acres per ranch
- Hunting land and food plot preparation — 1 to 20 acres
- Invasive species removal and storm damage cleanup
How Have Land Clearing Attachments Replaced Traditional Clearing Methods?
Mechanical clearing with mulchers, cutters, and grinders eliminates the need for bulldozer push-and-pile operations, burn crews, and hand-clearing teams. A forestry mulcher clears 1–3 acres per day in medium brush. Traditional hand crews clear 0.5–1 acre per day with 3–5 workers.
Mulch left in place after single-pass clearing reduces soil erosion by 60–80% compared to bare-earth dozer clearing. No burn permits are required. Fewer machines operate on site, reducing fuel costs and mobilization time.
What Types of Land Clearing Attachments Are Available?
7 primary land clearing attachment types exist: forestry mulchers, brush cutters, tree shears, tree pullers, grapples, stump grinders, and root rakes — each designed for a specific vegetation type, tree diameter, and clearing objective.
What Is the Best Attachment for Land Clearing?
Forestry mulchers are the most versatile single attachment for land clearing, processing trees up to 6–12 inches in diameter, brush, and undergrowth in one pass while leaving beneficial mulch on the ground.
"Best" depends on vegetation density, carrier machine, and project goal. Tree shears outperform mulchers for selective felling of 12-inch-plus hardwoods. Grapples handle post-clearing debris piling faster than any cutting attachment. Stump grinders finish what mulchers cannot reach below grade.
What Makes Forestry Mulchers the Most Popular Land Clearing Attachment?
Forestry mulchers process standing trees, brush, and stumps into ground-level mulch in a single pass without requiring a second machine for debris removal. Disc-style mulchers cut aggressively through trees up to 14 inches in diameter. Drum-style mulchers produce finer mulch and handle mixed vegetation more evenly.
- Cutting widths: 48, 60, and 72 inches
- Maximum tree diameter capacity: 6–14 inches depending on model
- Attachment weight range: 1,500–3,500 pounds
- Hydraulic flow requirement: 25–45 GPM high flow
- Tooth types: fixed carbide, replaceable carbide, and knife/claw-style
- Productivity rate: 1–3 acres per day in medium brush, 0.5–1 acre per day in heavy timber
When Should You Use a Brush Cutter Instead of a Mulcher?
Brush cutters handle grass, saplings up to 3 inches in diameter, and light undergrowth at lower cost and lower hydraulic demand than forestry mulchers. Rotary brush cutters operate on standard-flow hydraulics at 15–25 GPM.
- Deck widths: 60–72 inches
- Attachment weight: 800–1,500 pounds
- Primary applications: utility right-of-way maintenance, pasture reclamation, roadside clearing
- Hydraulic requirement: standard flow 15–25 GPM at 3,000 PSI
What Are Tree Shears and Tree Pullers Used For?
Tree shears make clean cuts on trees 6–16 inches in diameter for selective felling and timber salvage operations. Tree shears mount to skid steers and excavators and operate on standard-flow hydraulics at 15–25 GPM.
Tree pullers extract the entire tree including the root ball, providing permanent removal where stumps are unacceptable. Tree pullers grip the trunk base, clamp, and extract using the carrier machine's breakout force.
How Do Grapples Support Land Clearing Operations?
Grapples serve as the essential secondary attachment on every land clearing job, piling brush, pulling stumps, and sorting debris after primary cutting. Root grapples feature wider tine spacing for gripping root balls and stumps. Brush grapples use tighter tine spacing for loose vegetation.
- Root grapple widths: 66–84 inches, weight 800–1,800 pounds
- Brush grapple tine spacing: 3–5 inches for retaining small material
- Rock grapple applications: site cleanup where mixed debris includes stone
- Hydraulic requirement: standard flow 15–25 GPM
When Do You Need a Stump Grinder or Root Rake?
Stump grinders remove stumps 6–12 inches below grade level after felling or mulching operations. Stump grinder wheels range from 16–24 inches in diameter with 12–20 replaceable carbide teeth.
Root rakes clear surface roots, grade topsoil, and create windrows for hauling or burning. The standard clearing workflow follows this sequence: mulch standing vegetation, fell remaining large trees, grind stumps below grade, rake and grade the finished surface.
What Machines Are Compatible with Land Clearing Attachments?
Land clearing attachments mount to skid steer loaders, compact track loaders, excavators, and tractors through universal quick-attach couplers or pin-on systems. Hydraulic flow, machine weight, and rated operating capacity determine which attachments a specific carrier machine can run.
What Skid Steer Attachments Are Needed for Land Clearing?
A land clearing skid steer requires a minimum of 70 HP, 2,400-pound rated operating capacity, and high-flow hydraulics at 28-plus GPM. 3 attachments form the essential skid steer clearing kit: a forestry mulcher as the primary cutting tool, a root grapple for debris piling, and a brush cutter for maintenance mowing.
- Compact-frame skid steers (1,500–2,200 lb ROC): brush cutters, light grapples only
- Mid-frame skid steers (2,200–3,200 lb ROC): brush cutters, grapples, light-duty mulchers
- Large-frame skid steers (3,200-plus lb ROC): full-size forestry mulchers, tree shears, stump grinders
- Coupler types: universal quick-attach, manufacturer-specific quick-attach plates
Which Excavator-Mounted Land Clearing Attachments Perform Best?
Excavator-mounted forestry mulchers and brush cutters outperform skid steer attachments on steep terrain, stream banks, and selective clearing applications requiring extended reach. Excavators in the 8,000–30,000-pound class provide the auxiliary hydraulic circuits and boom articulation needed for precision clearing.
Excavator mulcher heads mount via pin-on brackets to the boom end. Excavator-mounted clearing attachments reach 20–30 feet beyond the machine's footprint, reducing repositioning time on slope work.
Can You Use Tractor-Mounted Attachments for Land Clearing?
PTO-driven mulchers and brush cutters mount to tractors with 50–120 HP and 540 or 1,000 RPM PTO output. Tractor-mounted clearing attachments suit agricultural land clearing, pasture reclamation, and fence line maintenance on open terrain.
Tractor-mounted attachments operate at slower cycle times than skid steer or excavator equivalents and offer less maneuverability in dense brush. Tractor PTO mulchers clear 0.5–1.5 acres per day in light to medium vegetation.
What Hydraulic Flow and Pressure Do Land Clearing Attachments Require?
Hydraulic requirements divide into 2 categories: standard flow and high flow. Mismatching hydraulic output to attachment demand reduces cutting performance by 30–50% and accelerates wear on both the attachment and the carrier machine's hydraulic system.
- Standard flow (15–25 GPM at 3,000 PSI): brush cutters, grapples, tree shears, tree pullers
- High flow (28–45 GPM at 3,500–4,500 PSI): forestry mulchers, stump grinders, forestry disc saws
- Case drain: forestry mulchers and stump grinders require a dedicated case drain line to prevent motor damage
- Pressure relief: all land clearing attachments require pressure relief settings matched to motor ratings
How Do You Choose the Right Land Clearing Attachments for Your Job?
What Is the Best Equipment for Clearing Land with Heavy Timber?
Heavy timber clearing (trees 10 inches in diameter and above) requires a disc-style forestry mulcher or tree shear mounted to a large-frame skid steer or mid-size excavator with high-flow hydraulics. Disc-style mulchers generate higher tip speed than drum-style and cut through hardwoods with fewer stalls.
For timber salvage operations, a tree shear preserves log value by making clean cuts without splintering. A grapple then sorts and stacks logs for removal.
Which Attachment Works Best for Light Brush and Undergrowth?
Rotary brush cutters clear grass, weeds, and saplings up to 3 inches in diameter at the lowest operating cost per acre. Brush cutters run on standard-flow hydraulics and weigh 800–1,500 pounds — mounting to compact-frame and mid-frame carriers without overloading.
Flail mowers produce finer material distribution than rotary cutters and leave a cleaner ground surface for immediate seeding or grading.
How Do Terrain and Soil Conditions Affect Attachment Selection?
Soft, wet soil conditions favor compact track loaders over wheeled skid steers due to lower ground pressure (4–6 PSI for CTLs vs. 7–10 PSI for wheeled machines). Rocky terrain requires reinforced mulcher decks and carbide-tipped teeth rated for intermittent rock contact.
Steep slopes above 20 degrees favor excavator-mounted attachments for operator safety and machine stability. Drum-style mulchers handle slope work better than disc-style due to lower rotational kickback forces.
What Specifications Should You Compare Before Buying?
5 specifications determine land clearing attachment performance and compatibility: cutting width, maximum tree diameter capacity, attachment weight versus carrier ROC, hydraulic flow and pressure requirements, and rotor or tooth type.
- Cutting width: match to clearing path width — 48-inch for tight access, 72-inch for open acreage
- Max tree diameter: confirm rated capacity covers the largest vegetation on site
- Attachment weight: attachment weight must not exceed 30% of the carrier's rated operating capacity
- Hydraulic flow: verify GPM and PSI output from the carrier match or exceed attachment requirements
- Tooth type: carbide teeth last 50–100 hours in clean wood; fixed teeth cost less but require more frequent replacement
What Do Land Clearing Attachments Cost and What ROI Can You Expect?
How Much Do Forestry Mulchers Charge per Hour?
Forestry mulcher operators charge $150–$350 per hour depending on machine size, vegetation density, and regional market rates. Owner-operators running their own mulcher reduce effective cost to $75–$125 per hour when accounting for machine payment, fuel, teeth, and maintenance.
Fuel consumption for a skid steer forestry mulcher averages 4–8 gallons per hour. Carbide teeth cost $8–$20 each and last 50–100 hours per tooth in clean wood. A full set of 20–30 teeth runs $200–$500 per replacement cycle.
What Is the Cost-per-Acre for Mechanical Land Clearing?
Mechanical land clearing costs $1,500–$4,000 per acre for medium-density brush and small trees. Heavy timber clearing runs $3,500–$8,000 per acre. Light brush maintenance clearing costs $500–$1,500 per acre.
Mechanical clearing eliminates hauling and disposal costs inherent in push-and-pile methods, which add $800–$2,000 per acre for debris removal.
How Do You Calculate Return on Investment for a Land Clearing Attachment?
A forestry mulcher priced at $15,000–$35,000 pays for itself in 30–80 billable hours at market rates of $200–$350 per hour. Contractors billing 20–40 mulching hours per month recover full attachment cost within 2–4 months of active use.
Annual maintenance costs average 8–12% of the attachment purchase price, covering teeth, belts, bearings, and hydraulic hose replacement. Carrier machine maintenance adds $2,000–$5,000 per year for heavy clearing operations.
Browse Forge Claw's Land Clearing Attachment Selection
Forge Claw carries professional-grade land clearing attachments built for demanding daily use. Every mulcher, brush cutter, grapple, tree shear, and stump grinder in stock meets the hydraulic and structural demands of full-time clearing work. You get expert support from people who understand the machines and the jobs. Equipment financing available for qualified buyers.
What Makes Forge Claw's Selection Right for Professional Use?
Every attachment in the lineup is spec'd for professional contractors, not weekend landowners. The selection covers compact-frame through large-frame carriers, standard-flow through high-flow hydraulics, and light brush through heavy timber applications. One source. The right fit for your machine and your work.
What Other Products Do Contractors Pair with Land Clearing Attachments?
Contractors regularly combine land clearing attachments with complementary products to expand capability and reduce changeovers.
Forestry Attachments
Operations requiring tree removal and brush management often demand specialized hydraulic tools beyond basic clearing work. Forestry Attachments like mulchers, stump grinders, and brush cutters mount to the same skid steers and excavators, handling detailed timber processing after initial site preparation. Contractors frequently run both attachment types on sequential phases of the same project.
Landscaping Attachments
After clearing vegetation and debris, most sites require finish grading, soil preparation, and surface refinement before final use. Landscaping Attachments such as tillers, levelers, and spreaders complete the transformation from raw cleared ground to usable space. Property development projects typically involve both clearing and landscaping phases using compatible machine platforms.
Frequently Asked Questions About Land Clearing Attachments
What Is the Best Attachment for Clearing Wooded Land?
A disc-style forestry mulcher is the best single attachment for clearing wooded land, processing trees up to 14 inches in diameter and leaving mulch in place to prevent erosion.
For selective clearing where timber has salvage value, a tree shear makes clean cuts without splintering. A root grapple handles debris stacking and stump extraction after felling. For mixed vegetation — standing trees, brush, and undergrowth — a forestry mulcher completes the job in one pass without secondary equipment. Drum-style mulchers suit lighter vegetation and produce finer mulch consistency.
What Size Skid Steer Do You Need for Land Clearing?
Land clearing with a forestry mulcher requires a large-frame skid steer or compact track loader rated at 3,200-plus pounds operating capacity with high-flow hydraulics delivering 28–45 GPM.
Mid-frame machines in the 2,200–3,200-pound ROC range run light-duty mulchers on brush up to 4 inches in diameter. Compact-frame machines below 2,200 pounds ROC are limited to brush cutters and grapples. Carrier machine weight must exceed the combined weight of the attachment plus material load by a minimum 2:1 ratio for safe and productive operation on uneven terrain.
How Do You Maintain and Replace Wear Parts on Land Clearing Attachments?
Forestry mulcher teeth require inspection every 8–10 operating hours and replacement every 50–100 hours depending on material hardness and rock exposure.
A full tooth set of 20–30 carbide teeth costs $200–$500 per replacement. Bearing and belt inspection intervals are 100–200 hours. Hydraulic hoses require visual inspection daily and replacement at 2,000–3,000 hours or at the first sign of wear, cracking, or seepage. Brush cutter blades sharpen every 20–40 hours and replace every 200–400 hours. Greasing all pivot points at 8-hour intervals prevents premature bushing failure.
What Safety Precautions Should Operators Follow When Using Forestry Mulchers?
Operators maintain a 300-foot minimum safety perimeter around an active forestry mulcher to prevent injury from thrown debris — wood chips, rocks, and tooth fragments travel at high velocity.
Polycarbonate or laminated front door guards rated for forestry work are required on the carrier machine cab. Operators verify the clearing zone for buried utilities, metal debris, and wire before starting. OSHA requires rollover protective structures on all carrier machines. Side-screen mesh guards with 0.5-inch maximum openings protect hydraulic lines and the operator compartment from lateral projectiles during mulching operations.
Is It More Cost-Effective to Buy or Rent a Land Clearing Attachment?
Buying a land clearing attachment is more cost-effective for contractors billing 15 or more hours per month. Renting suits operators with fewer than 40 hours of annual clearing work.
Forestry mulcher rental rates average $1,500–$3,500 per week. A purchased mulcher at $15,000–$35,000 breaks even against rental costs within 10–20 weeks of use. Ownership eliminates mobilization delays, availability constraints, and rental damage liability. Contractors running 200-plus clearing hours per year save $10,000–$25,000 annually by owning versus renting at weekly rates.
Browse Forge Claw's full selection of professional-grade land clearing attachments — equipment financing available for qualified buyers.