Land clearing work in Canada varies enormously by region. BC and Northern Ontario clearing often involves dense timber, mixed softwoods, and rocky ground — the mulcher and stump grinder are doing heavy work. Prairie clearing in Saskatchewan and Alberta tends to involve lighter bush, willows, and poplars, often on heavy clay or gumbo soils where a grapple becomes critical for pulling root masses. Know your terrain before you spec your attachment list.
This guide covers the four-attachment clearing setup that handles the full range of Canadian clearing conditions: mulcher or rotary cutter for standing vegetation, grapple for debris management, stump grinder for root elimination, and a general purpose bucket for final cleanup.
High-flow matters here. Mulchers and forestry-grade drum cutters almost always require high-flow hydraulics — typically 25–40 GPM depending on the model. Confirm your machine has high-flow capability (or an upgradeable aux circuit) before ordering a mulcher. Stump grinders and grapples typically run on standard flow.
Attachments You'll Need
1. Mulcher or Rotary Cutter — Standing Vegetation
A drum mulcher is the preferred tool for dense forestry work — trees up to 6–8" diameter, thick brush, standing timber. It processes material in place, leaving a mulched layer on the ground rather than piles to deal with. This is the fastest path to a cleared lot when the material can stay on-site.
A rotary cutter (brush cutter) is the right choice for lighter work: overgrown fields, pasture cleanup, saplings, cattails, and tall grass. They're faster than mulchers on light material and don't require high flow on smaller models. If you're primarily doing brush and lighter bush rather than trees, a rotary cutter will outperform a mulcher in both speed and cost.
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2. Grapple — Debris Handling
After cutting, you have debris. A grapple lets you grab piles of brush, logs, and root masses and move them to a burn pile, chipper, or staging area. It's also effective for pulling stumps in softer ground, dragging fallen trees, and sorting material by size. On rocky ground, a root-and-brush grapple can dig into the ground slightly to get under root balls.
Root-and-brush grapples are preferred for forestry work. Bucket grapples (a bucket with a grapple claw) are more versatile and useful if you're also doing material handling. Log grapples are specialized for moving sorted timber.
3. Stump Grinder — Root Elimination
You can't grade over a field of stumps. A stump grinder takes the stump below grade — typically 6–12" down — so the ground can be graded, seeded, or built on. This is especially critical in BC and Ontario where stumps from larger timber would otherwise require expensive extraction equipment.
Stump grinders run on standard or low-end high-flow hydraulics. Confirm grinding wheel diameter vs the stump size you're typically dealing with. Larger wheels handle bigger stumps but are heavier and slower on small stumps.
4. General Purpose Bucket — Final Cleanup
After the mulcher, grapple, and stump grinder have done their work, there's always material to clean up: mulch piles, grinding debris, small rocks brought to the surface, and root fragments. A standard GP bucket handles this efficiently and doubles as your general-purpose tool when you're not on clearing work.
In What Order
- Mulcher or rotary cutter (first): Process standing vegetation first. Mulch in place where site conditions allow — this reduces debris handling significantly. Work from the edges in to give yourself a staging area.
- Grapple (debris management): Grab, pile, and move debris that the mulcher left or that needs to go to a specific location. Pull any remaining root masses or standing material.
- Stump grinder (stumps): Grind after debris is cleared — you need to see the stumps and have clear access. Grind to 6–8" minimum depth for standard grading work; 12" if the site is being built on.
- Bucket (final pass): Clean up grinding debris and residual material. Grade rough spots. Leave the site ready for the next phase of work.
What to Watch For
- BC and northern clearing needs high-flow capable machines. Forestry-grade mulchers draw 30–45 GPM. If you're bidding on serious forestry work and your machine only has standard flow, your mulcher options are limited to smaller, slower drum cutters. High-flow upgrade or a different machine is worth the math.
- Prairie clay and gumbo can hold root masses hard. In Saskatchewan and Manitoba, root systems in heavy clay can require more grapple force than in sandy or loam soils. Look for grapples with aggressive tine geometry and two-cylinder clamping force rather than single-cylinder budget models.
- Check for buried hazards before you mulch. Old fence lines, buried wire, survey stakes, and drainage tile are invisible until your mulcher hits them. Walk the site before you start. A stump grinder hitting buried wire is a day-ending event and a safety issue.
Browse the Land Clearing Catalog
Find specific clearing attachments available through Canadian dealers.
MulchersGrapplesStump GrindersRotary CuttersRelated Guides
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