🎉 What’s Trending in Customer Purchases? Meet “The Mighty Orange & The Beast.”
Folks, the gravel’s trembling — because we just welcomed two fresh members to the orange-club: the mighty Kubota B2601 TLB and the burly R640 — now proudly owned by Kaj Nielsen of Kolob Terrace, located in picturesque Zion, Utah, and Reed Stallings of Stallings Construction, respectively.
Discover the new Kubota SVL75-3 at Stallings Construction. Explore its 74.3-HP engine, sealed cab, 7-inch touchscreen, 2,490-lb rated capacity, and 6,191-lb breakout force. Ideal for construction, landscaping, and heavy-duty performance.
Stallings Construction just upgraded to the new Kubota SVL75-3, and this compact track loader is loaded with features.
Powered by a 74.3-horsepower engine and equipped with a fully sealed, comfort-focused cab, the SVL75-3 keeps dust and noise where they belong: outside. Add in the sharp 7-inch touchscreen display, and you’ve got a machine that feels straight out of a sci-fi set.
Kubota B2601 TLB arrives at Kolob Terrace, Zion – the perfect cliff-side companion for rugged terrain and red-rock beauty. Rock meets utility in style.
When Kaj told us he needed a machine that could “handle the Utah snow-and-red-cliff vibe,” we immediately thought of the B2601 TLB — a compact, versatile tractor/backhoe/loader combo with just the right balance of agility and power.
Picture this: morning light hitting the canyon walls, a view across sweeping Utah (sometimes snowy) red-rock vistas, and in the foreground — a bright-orange Kubota, quietly turning idea into dirt and dreams into footing.
Thanks to the B2601 TLB, Kaj now has the tools to:
In short, Kolob Terrace has rightfully graduated from “raw red-rock parcel” to “future retreat with backbone.”
Here’s to Kaj Nielsen — may your Kubota B2601 TLB dig deep, lift clean, and leave Kolob Terrace standing tall, stable, and ready for whatever landscape dreams you build next. 🍂
🏗️ Kubota SVL75-3 Review: Features, Specs & Power for the Jobsite | Stallings Construction
🔧 Power, Agility & “Get-It-Done” Attitude
đźšśWhy the B2601 TLB Is a Natural Fit for Kolob Terrace
⛰️What This Means for Kolob Terrace — From Goat-Trail to Grand Retreat
💪A Few Friendly Reminders (Because Tractors Aren’t Superheroes… Yet)
👏Final Cheers💯
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Powered by a 74.3-horsepower engine and equipped with a fully sealed, comfort-focused cab, the SVL75-3 keeps dust and noise where they belong: outside.
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Add in the sharp 7-inch touchscreen display, and you’ve got a machine that feels straight out of a sci-fi set.
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With a rated operating capacity of approximately 2,490 lbs (35%) and a powerful 6,191-lb bucket breakout force, the Kubota SVL75-3 delivers the muscle needed for construction, land clearing, grading, and heavy lifting. Whether you’re shaping landscapes or tackling tough jobsite challenges, this machine is built to outperform. As one operator joked, “It doesn’t just move dirt — it challenges it to a fight… and dirt never wins.”
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With ~25.5 HP, 4-wheel drive, and hydrostatic transmission, the B2601 is built for property work on rocky, uneven terrain — perfect for driveways, landscaping, or prepping building sites on cliff-side lots.
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The loader + backhoe (TLB) setup gives great flexibility: one moment you’re clearing brush, the next you’re digging post-holes or leveling ground for a fire pit or pad.
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Compact enough to maneuver tighter spaces — yet sturdy enough to handle heavy work. For a property like Kolob Terrace, surrounded by canyon walls and red-rock terrain, the B2601 TLB is basically a Swiss-army tractor.
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Smooth and grade driveways that might otherwise resemble goat trails.
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Clear brush and prepare the ground for small outbuildings, fire-pit areas, or a workshop pad.
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Sculpt the land to match the vision — retaining the natural beauty while adding usable, safe spaces.
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On steep or loose slopes, compact tractors need respect. Keep the loader low, avoid sudden turns, and stay aware of weight/distribution.
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While B2601 is versatile, it’s not meant to bulldoze mountain-size boulders. Use it for realistic tasks: grading, light digging, moving soil/rock — not cliff-scale demolition.
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Always check stability before digging or lifting on uneven ground — better safe than leaning sideways!