| Stories from the Job Site |
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TREE-MEN
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| John Deere 244J Compact Loader at KT Enterprise's nursery in Chantilly, Virginia. |
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It’s early spring, and KT Enterprise’s nursery in Chantilly, Virginia,
is bustling. Seven truckloads of trees arrive daily to maintain KT’s
$1-million inventory of over 150 varieties of trees. The nursery also
supplies landscapers in the area with every imaginable material,
from concrete pavers to woodchips.
At the epicenter of the burgeoning enterprise is a John Deere
244J Compact Loader. The machine quickly unloads the truck
and drops the trees into neatly arranged rows, slipping effortlessly
in and out of the narrow corridors of other trees. Steve Wetzel,
department head of the landscaping division, gets on his radio
and calls in a John Deere skid steer loader for support as a couple
of local landscapers’ trucks roll in.
"With its articulated steering, the 244J can really get into tight
spaces," says Wetzel as the skid steer rolls by to load up the
trucks. "Until two years ago we were running a JCB, but it was
big and bulky, which made it hard to get in and out of the lines of
trees. The 244J can handle everything the JCB can, but it’s much
more compact and maneuverable."
After the trees are unloaded, the 244J moves a 2,400-pound
pallet of pavers followed by a 5,500-pound cherry tree. Then it
switches to a bucket to load up another landscaper’s truck with
gravel. When another tractor-trailer full of trees arrives, it’s time to
switch back to the forks again.
"It’s got enormous lifting capability, so we use it to load
some of the heavier materials our skid steers can’t
handle," says Wetzel. "And it’s got more reach, so we
can easily dump to the center of tandem-axle trucks for
quicker and easier loading. They’re incredibly versatile,
too. We use it to sweep parking lots and to load salt
trucks in the winter."
"I bleed green — or yellow in this case"
One of the leading landscapers in the Washington
metropolitan area, KT Enterprises provides full-service
landscape-development services, including landscape
installation, site-work construction, irrigation, and environmental services. Clients include some of the
area’s largest and most prestigious homebuilders,
developers, and commercial contractors, as well as
local and federal governments.
Since it was founded in 1976, KT had used mainly Bobcat
and New Holland — until 1999, that is, when they
tested a John Deere skid steer loader against the latest
competitor models. Deere outperformed them all.
"We have 50 employees running our equipment every
day, so it really came down to which machine they felt
most comfortable using," recalls Wetzel. "Our guys just fell in love with the Deere — they liked the controls, the
maneuverability, the visibility, the roominess. Since then
we’ve added nothing but John Deere to our fleet."
Currently the company’s stable of Deere equipment includes
14 skid steer loaders, three compact track loaders (CTLs),
a 35ZTS Compact Excavator, and a 110 Tractor Loader
Backhoe (TLB). The irrigation department uses the compact
excavator and TLB mainly for putting in drainage pipes and
digging out sleeves underneath roads.
"The 110 is very versatile and turf friendly," explains Wetzel.
"We like the compact excavator because it can get into
tight places and work right up next to houses. With its
zero tail swing, you can rotate it completely around and
not have to worry about banging into anything."
Wetzel’s landscaping division puts the skid steer loaders
and CTLs to work on some of the largest landscape
projects in the region. On a recent job, they installed
8,500 yards of sod and 140 trees at a 535-unit retirement
development in less than a week.
Three crews of seven laborers were each supported by
a skid steer loader and a compact track loader, which
unloaded three tractor-trailers carrying 130 trees and eight
tractor-trailers carrying 16 pallets of sod. The skid steers
worked mostly on asphalt, while the tracked machines
worked mainly in dirt and wet conditions, where they excel.
On one particularly steep common area, the CTL demonstrated
its extraordinary ability to cling to the side of the hill
as it brought rolls of sod down to the crew. "Deere machines
are extremely stable," observes Wetzel. "They don’t tip as
easily as competitors."
Uptime is also better. "They’re very seldom down," he says.
"In fact, other than regular maintenance, I don’t remember
them being down at all. And they’re very easy to maintain —
everything is wide open and easy to get to. Plus the tracks
on the CTL are much easier to clean than on the Bobcat,
which really saves time."
Parts and service support has been outstanding. "Parts are
always in stock — you seldom have to wait for anything,' says
Wetzel. "And I have only great things to say about our dealer.
If there’s a problem, they’ll come right out and take care of it,
and even give you a loaner machine if you need one."*
Wetzel, who has also owned Deere farm equipment, says
he’s always been a Deere man at heart. "I bleed green —
or yellow in this case. We’ll continue to use John Deere
because it makes us more productive and profitable."
*KT Enterprises is serviced by James River Equipment in Manassas, Virginia.
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