Mega Attachments Mulch Bucket vs The W.I.T.C.H.™: Which Is Better for Moving Mulch?
Mega Attachments Mulch Bucket kits and The W.I.T.C.H.™ both help landscaping crews move material with a mower.
But they are not the same type of system.
Mega Attachments uses a front-mounted mulch bucket to carry and dump material from the mower.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is an Instant Connect and Release Wheelbarrow System built around workflow.
Mega Attachments carries material in a bucket mounted to the front of the mower.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ lets a compatible mower or machine tow a standard wheelbarrow over distance, release it in seconds for hand placement, and use a Cart Adapter when tow-cart staging makes more sense.
That is the main difference.
A bucket carries material.
A wheelbarrow places material.
A tow cart can stage larger-volume loads.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ connects those functions into one jobsite workflow.
Mega Attachments gives you a front-mounted mulch bucket.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ gives you wheelbarrow tow, hand placement, and tow-cart capability in one workflow system.
The Simple Answer
Mega Attachments may make sense when the jobsite is open, the mower can safely drive directly to the dump location, and the crew wants a dedicated front-mounted mulch bucket.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is the better choice when the crew needs more than one way to move and place material.
That includes jobs where:
- Distance matters
- Final placement matters
- Volume matters
- Tight access matters
- Hand control matters
- Workflow efficiency matters
The core difference is simple:
Mega Attachments carries material on the mower.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ moves the wheelbarrow, keeps the wheelbarrow usable by hand, and can also support tow-cart transport with the proper Cart Adapter.
The mower handles the distance.
The wheelbarrow handles the placement.
The tow-cart adapter adds volume when volume makes sense.
Connect. Tow. Release. Place. Return. Repeat.
What Mega Attachments Does
Mega Attachments Mulch Bucket kits are front-mounted mower bucket systems designed to carry material on the mower.
They can be useful for moving mulch, soil, debris, clippings, and other materials when the jobsite is open enough for the mower and bucket to travel together.
They give the mower a dedicated front bucket function.
Mega Attachments can make sense when:
- The property is open
- The mower can reach the dump location
- There is room to maneuver the front-mounted bucket
- The material can be dumped directly from the mower
- Final hand placement is not the main concern
- Carrying a bulky material like mulch up front is useful
That is the strength of Mega Attachments.
It lets the mower carry material in a front bucket.
But the bucket stays tied to the mower.
That is where the limitation begins.
Uses Equipment Crews May Already Own
Mega Attachments gives the mower its own front-mounted bucket.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ takes a different approach.
It connects equipment many crews may already own:
- A compatible mower or machine
- A standard wheelbarrow
- A compatible tow cart
- Other compatible towing machines when appropriate
That makes “using equipment already on the jobsite” a stronger part of The W.I.T.C.H.™ workflow.
The mower handles distance.
The wheelbarrow handles placement.
The tow cart can handle larger-volume staging when the W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter is used.
Instead of adding one fixed bucket to one mower, The W.I.T.C.H.™ helps connect the tools already on the jobsite into one smoother material-moving system.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ Multi-Mode Advantage
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is not tied to one fixed bucket, tub, or cart size.
It is built around connection, release, and workflow.
That gives crews multiple ways to move material.
Wheelbarrow Tow Mode
Use a compatible mower or machine to tow a standard wheelbarrow over distance.
This removes the long-distance push while keeping the wheelbarrow in the workflow.
The wheelbarrow still carries the load.
The mower handles the travel.
Hand Placement Mode
Release the wheelbarrow in seconds and use it normally by hand.
This keeps the wheelbarrow available for tight access, dumping, tipping, turning, backing up, and precise final placement.
The wheelbarrow remains a true wheelbarrow.
It is not converted into a permanent cart.
Tow Cart Mode
Use the W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter with a compatible tow cart when larger-volume staging makes more sense.
This allows crews to transport bigger loads without removing The W.I.T.C.H.™ or interrupting the wheelbarrow workflow.
Tow Cart Mode is useful when a crew wants to stage material near a large bed, island, curb line, cleanup area, or work zone.
The cart can be dropped where the crew needs volume.
The mower can continue moving wheelbarrows elsewhere.
That is the difference between a fixed front bucket and a workflow system.
Use the wheelbarrow when placement matters.
Use the tow cart when volume matters.
Use the mower or machine to handle the distance.
Where Mega Attachments Has a Real Advantage
Mega Attachments does have a real advantage in open-area dumping.
A front-mounted mulch bucket can make sense when the mower can drive directly to the dump location and the material can be dumped where it belongs.
Mega Attachments also gives the mower a dedicated bucket that can hold bulky material such as mulch.
That can reduce trips in open areas where precision hand placement is not the main issue.
That is a fair benefit.
But bucket volume is only one part of the workflow.
The bigger question is still whether the bucket can get the material exactly where it needs to go after it is loaded.
Capacity and Working Load
Mega Attachments advertises a 15 cubic foot bucket on many mulch bucket kits.
That is a large volume compared with many wheelbarrows.
But cubic feet and working load are not the same thing.
A bucket can be large by volume but still limited by rated working load, mower balance, terrain, traction, slope, and safe operating conditions.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ works differently.
It is not tied to one fixed container.
Capacity depends on the full setup:
- The towing machine
- The wheelbarrow or cart
- The material being hauled
- The terrain
- The traction
- The slope
- The safe operating conditions
That means The W.I.T.C.H.™ system can support different hauling setups depending on the job.
A standard wheelbarrow may be best when placement matters.
A heavy-duty contractor wheelbarrow may be better when heavier wheelbarrow loads are needed.
A two-wheel wheelbarrow may be better when stability matters.
A tow cart may be better when higher-volume staging matters.
The point is flexibility.
A fixed bucket gives you one container.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ gives you a workflow system that can use the tool suited for the job.
Where the Front-Mounted Bucket Limitation Shows Up
A front-mounted bucket extends the working footprint of the mower.
That matters.
Landscaping jobs are not always open.
Mulch often needs to be placed:
- Around plants
- Along bed edges
- Through gates
- Beside curbs
- Near foundations
- Into corners
- Around trees
- Along tight walkways
- Across finished turf
- In areas where a mower should not drive
If the mower and front bucket cannot reach the final placement area, the bucket can only dump nearby.
Then the crew still has to move the material again.
That second handling is the hidden cost.
So the better question is not:
Can the mower carry mulch?
The better question is:
Can the mulch get exactly where it needs to go without being handled twice?
That is where The W.I.T.C.H.™ has the advantage.
What The W.I.T.C.H.™ Does Differently
The W.I.T.C.H.™ does not replace the wheelbarrow.
It makes the wheelbarrow faster.
A wheelbarrow is still one of the best tools for mulch placement because it is narrow, balanced, familiar, easy to dump, and easy to control by hand.
The problem is not the wheelbarrow.
The problem is pushing it too far.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ solves that problem by letting a compatible mower tow the wheelbarrow over the long distance, then release it in seconds for hand use.
The mower handles the distance.
The wheelbarrow handles the placement.
That is the workflow advantage.
Fixed Bucket vs Instant Release
One of the biggest differences between Mega Attachments and The W.I.T.C.H.™ is what happens at the work area.
Mega Attachments remains a front-mounted mower bucket.
That can work well when the mower can drive directly to where the material needs to be dumped.
But if the material still needs to be placed by hand, the bucket does not become a wheelbarrow.
It stays with the mower.
That means the crew may still need a shovel, rake, bucket, second wheelbarrow, or extra handling step.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is different.
The wheelbarrow releases in seconds and immediately becomes a true wheelbarrow again.
That matters because crews need the transition to be fast enough that they actually use it.
If a tool stays tied to the mower, the mower controls where the material can go.
If the wheelbarrow releases instantly, the worker controls where the material goes.
That is the workflow difference.
Why Mega Attachments Is a Bucket, Not a Wheelbarrow Workflow
Mega Attachments is useful because it gives the mower a bucket.
But a bucket and a wheelbarrow do not solve the same final-placement problem.
A bucket is designed to carry and dump.
A wheelbarrow is designed to push, tip, feather, back up, turn, angle, and place material by hand.
That difference matters on real mulch jobs.
A front bucket may dump mulch near the bed.
But the wheelbarrow can work inside the bed area.
It can fit around plants.
It can move along edges.
It can be controlled by the worker at the final point of placement.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ keeps that wheelbarrow behavior in the workflow.
It does not ask the bucket to become a wheelbarrow.
It moves the wheelbarrow that already does that job.
Load Balance and Hand Control
Final placement is not only about whether material can be dumped.
It is about how the tool behaves when loaded.
A wheelbarrow is familiar because the worker can feel and control the load.
The handles, wheel position, dumping motion, and balance are designed for manual placement.
A front-mounted bucket is controlled by the mower.
That can be useful in open spaces.
But it is not the same as hand placement.
Once the mower reaches the limit of where it should go, the bucket’s usefulness may end.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ keeps the standard wheelbarrow in the workflow.
The worker already knows how it handles.
The worker already knows how it dumps.
The worker already knows where it fits.
That is a major advantage.
Why Final Placement Matters
A front-mounted bucket can dump mulch.
But dumping is not always placement.
If the bucket dumps material near the bed, someone may still need to shovel, rake, drag, bucket, or wheelbarrow the material into position.
A wheelbarrow can be placed by hand.
It can be tipped where the material is needed.
It can move through tighter spaces.
It can work around plants, curbs, gates, and finished landscapes.
That is why the wheelbarrow remains so valuable.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ keeps that value while adding machine-powered travel.
Maneuverability and Jobsite Access
Mega Attachments is mounted out front.
That means the mower becomes longer in operation.
In open areas, that may not be a problem.
But on real jobsites, length matters.
A longer front-mounted setup can be harder to maneuver around:
- Gates
- Trailers
- Tight turns
- Parked vehicles
- Curbs
- Trees
- Beds
- Retaining walls
- Narrow access areas
- Finished landscapes
The W.I.T.C.H.™ uses a different approach.
The wheelbarrow is towed over distance, then released when the job calls for tighter control.
That means the mower does not have to complete every part of the placement.
The mower handles the travel.
The wheelbarrow handles the tight work.
Gate Access and Real-World Use
Gate access is not only about whether the attachment fits through the opening.
The mower also has to fit.
The mower also has to control the loaded attachment.
A smaller mower may fit through a narrower gate, but that does not automatically mean it is the best machine to push or carry a loaded front-mounted bucket through the gate area.
That is an important real-world distinction.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ approaches gate access differently.
The mower can tow the wheelbarrow across the open distance.
Then the wheelbarrow can release and go through the gate by hand.
That keeps the mower out of places where it may not belong.
And it keeps the wheelbarrow doing what it already does best.
Front Load on Caster Wheels vs Rear-Towed Load
Another important difference is where the load is carried and how the mower is being asked to handle it.
Mega Attachments is a front-mounted bucket system.
That means the material is carried out front, with much of the working load supported by the front-mounted bucket and its small front caster wheels.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ works differently.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is a rear-connected towing system.
The material stays in the wheelbarrow or tow cart behind the mower, and the mower pulls the load from the rear.
That difference matters on real jobsites.
Front-mounted caster wheels can work well on hard, flat, open surfaces. But on turf, soft ground, uneven soil, mulch areas, or mild slopes, small caster wheels may create more resistance, sink, scrub, or affect steering depending on load, terrain, and operating conditions.
With The W.I.T.C.H.™, the mower is not carrying the material out front on small caster wheels.
The wheelbarrow or tow cart carries its own load on its own wheel or wheels.
The mower pulls from the rear, where the mower’s drive wheels provide the main traction.
That can make the rear-towed workflow feel more natural in many landscaping conditions, especially when the route includes turf, uneven ground, or softer areas.
The simple difference is:
Mega Attachments carries the material out front.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ lets the mower tow the tool that carries the material.
Why Rear Towing Can Be an Advantage
The W.I.T.C.H.™ keeps the material load behind the mower instead of placing the load out front.
That creates several practical advantages.
First, the mower is not carrying the mulch in a front-mounted bucket.
It is pulling from the rear.
Second, the wheelbarrow or tow cart carries its own load on its own wheel or wheels.
Third, the mower’s drive wheels remain the primary traction point for moving the load.
That matters because traction, steering, and tracking are major parts of material movement on turf and real landscaping surfaces.
A front-mounted bucket may carry material well in open areas, but the load and caster wheels are ahead of the mower. On soft ground or uneven terrain, that can affect how the mower steers and tracks.
With The W.I.T.C.H.™, the load follows behind the mower.
The mower does not need to push or carry the material out front.
The mower pulls.
The load follows.
As always, the right setup depends on mower size, attachment rating, load weight, slope, terrain, traction, speed, and safe operating conditions.
Hills, Side Slopes, and Soft Ground
Jobsite terrain matters.
A front-mounted loaded bucket places material at the front of the mower.
On soft turf, uneven ground, or side slopes, that front-loaded arrangement can change steering, tracking, traction, and handling depending on mower size, tire traction, bucket load, ground conditions, and operator control.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ uses a rear-towing load path.
The wheelbarrow or cart carries the load behind the mower.
The mower pulls from the rear.
The drive tires stay engaged as the working traction point.
That can make The W.I.T.C.H.™ better suited for jobs where the mower needs to travel across mild slopes, uneven areas, or softer ground under safe operating conditions.
As with any hauling setup, slope, speed, load weight, traction, surface conditions, and operator judgment matter.
Loading Away From the Engine Area
Another advantage of The W.I.T.C.H.™ is where the material is loaded.
With The W.I.T.C.H.™, mulch, soil, compost, stone, or debris is loaded into the wheelbarrow or tow cart behind the mower.
That keeps loose material farther from the mower’s engine area, air intake, belts, pulleys, and front components.
Landscape material is dirty, dusty, and abrasive.
Keeping loose material away from sensitive mower components can be a practical advantage.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ lets the mower move the load without putting the load on the mower.
Dumping vs Placing
Mega Attachments has a dumping function.
That is useful.
But a dump is not always clean placement.
Depending on the material, moisture, load shape, and where the mower can travel, some material may still need to be pulled, raked, or moved after dumping.
Even when the dump works well, the material may still need to be spread or moved by hand.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ does not depend on the mower dumping the material.
It gives the worker the wheelbarrow back.
The operator can place, tip, dump, feather, or control the load by hand.
That is why instant release matters.
Why Instant Release Is Critical
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is not just about towing.
The value is the instant release.
If a wheelbarrow is difficult to disconnect, crews may avoid disconnecting it.
If disconnecting requires tools, pins, clips, or extra steps, the wheelbarrow stops being a true final-placement tool.
At that point, it becomes just another tow cart.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is different because the wheelbarrow can release in seconds.
That keeps the workflow practical.
Tow it across distance.
Release it at the work area.
Use it by hand.
Reconnect and return.
That is the difference between simply moving material and improving the jobsite workflow.
Tow Cart Mode vs Fixed Front Bucket
Tow Cart Mode is an important difference in this comparison.
Mega Attachments is its own front-mounted bucket.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ can use a cart differently.
With the W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter, a compatible mower or machine can tow a properly rated tow cart behind the machine without removing The W.I.T.C.H.™ from the workflow.
That matters when a crew needs to stage a bigger load in one work area.
For example, a crew may be working in a large rose bed, flower bed, landscape island, or mulch area where the material must be placed by hand.
Instead of running smaller loads into that area repeatedly, the operator can tow a larger cart of material to the area and leave it for the crew.
Then the mower can keep running wheelbarrows to other parts of the job.
That is a different workflow from a fixed front bucket.
The cart becomes one part of the jobsite system.
It does not replace the wheelbarrow.
It does not stop the wheelbarrow workflow.
It adds volume when volume makes sense.
Drop the cart.
Keep the wheelbarrows moving.
Trailer Space and Transport
Trailer space matters on landscaping crews.
Mega Attachments is a front-mounted bucket system.
Depending on the mower and setup, the bucket may extend well out in front of the mower during use.
Unlike some front-mounted carts that fold upward for transport, the Mega Attachments bucket may need to be removed from the mower connection point if the crew wants to reduce the mower’s overall transport length.
That means the bucket still has to be stored somewhere on the trailer, in the truck, or at the shop.
That can matter when trailer space is already limited.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ handles transport differently.
Because it is a connect-and-release system, the wheelbarrow is not permanently tied to the mower.
The wheelbarrow can be disconnected and used or stored separately.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ can also flip up into a more compact rear-connected position depending on the setup.
So the comparison is not simply about whether an attachment can be transported.
It is about how much extra trailer length, removal time, storage space, and workflow interruption the attachment creates.
Mega Attachments is a front-mounted bucket that may need to be removed and stored separately for transport.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is a rear-connected workflow system that can disconnect the wheelbarrow or flip into a more compact position while keeping the wheelbarrow free to be used as a wheelbarrow.
Side-by-Side Comparison: Mega Attachments vs The W.I.T.C.H.™
| Jobsite Need | Mega Attachments Mulch Bucket | The W.I.T.C.H.™ |
|---|---|---|
| Main category | Front-mounted mower bucket | Instant Connect and Release Wheelbarrow System |
| Main function | Carry and dump material in a front bucket | Tow, release, place, and adapt |
| Material location | In a bucket mounted on the mower | In a wheelbarrow or tow cart behind the mower |
| Wheelbarrow towing | No | Yes |
| True wheelbarrow hand placement | No | Yes |
| Tow-cart capability | No | Yes, with W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter |
| Uses existing wheelbarrows | No | Yes |
| Uses existing tow carts | No | Yes, when properly adapted |
| Loading height | Bucket loading can be convenient in open setups | Depends on wheelbarrow or cart used |
| Advertised volume | Often listed around 15 cubic feet | Depends on wheelbarrow or tow cart used |
| Final placement | Limited to where mower and bucket can dump | Strong advantage because wheelbarrow releases |
| Hand use | No true wheelbarrow release | Instant release gives back the true wheelbarrow |
| Tight access | Limited by mower and front bucket footprint | Wheelbarrow can release and go by hand |
| Gate access | Mower and bucket must access the area | Wheelbarrow can release and go through by hand |
| Load path | Material carried out front | Mower tows load from the rear |
| Soft ground / mild slopes | Front-loaded carrying may affect steering and traction | Rear towing may be more natural under safe conditions |
| Engine-area exposure | Material is carried closer to mower front | Material stays behind the mower |
| Best advantage | Front-bucket hauling and dumping | Multi-mode material-moving workflow |
| Best fit | Open-area dumping | Distance, placement, volume options, and workflow flexibility |
Where Mega Attachments Can Make Sense
Mega Attachments can make sense when the jobsite is open and the mower can safely drive directly to the dump location.
It may be useful when:
- The crew wants a dedicated front-mounted bucket
- The job has wide access
- The terrain is suitable
- The mower has enough size and traction for the loaded bucket
- The material can be dumped where the mower can go
- Final hand placement is not the main issue
- Bucket volume is important
Once the job requires tight access, hand placement, gates, soft ground, mild slopes, existing wheelbarrows, tow-cart flexibility, or avoiding second handling, The W.I.T.C.H.™ becomes the stronger workflow.
Where The W.I.T.C.H.™ Is the Better Choice
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is the better choice when the wheelbarrow is still needed.
That includes jobs where:
- The material must be placed, not just dumped
- The mower cannot safely enter the final area
- The crew needs tight access
- The job has long travel distances
- The job includes gates, beds, curbs, trees, or finished areas
- The crew already owns wheelbarrows
- The crew already owns tow carts
- The job requires controlled dumping
- The crew wants to reduce pushing without losing hand control
- The crew wants the material load behind the mower, not carried out front
- The crew wants the mower’s drive wheels doing the pulling
- The crew wants a lower-cost way to improve existing tools
- The crew wants a true wheelbarrow, not a fixed bucket
This is the real-world advantage.
A front bucket can move mulch.
A wheelbarrow can place mulch.
A tow cart can stage larger loads.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ connects those jobs into one workflow.
Added Benefit: Multiple Wheelbarrow Workflow
The W.I.T.C.H.™ can also support a repeatable wheelbarrow workflow.
Because the wheelbarrow can connect, tow, release, and return, multiple wheelbarrows can be used in rotation.
One wheelbarrow can be loaded.
One wheelbarrow can be transported.
One wheelbarrow can be placed by hand.
An empty wheelbarrow can be returned for the next load.
This creates a jobsite rhythm:
Load. Tow. Release. Place. Return. Repeat.
That is difficult for a mounted bucket to match because the bucket stays tied to the mower.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ gives the wheelbarrow back to the worker.
Added Benefit: Cart Staging Without Stopping the Wheelbarrow Workflow
Tow Cart Mode adds another workflow option.
A crew may have one large bed or work zone that needs a lot of material placed by hand.
Instead of making repeated wheelbarrow trips into that same area, the operator can use the W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter to transport a larger cart load to that location.
The cart can be staged for the crew.
Then the mower can continue towing wheelbarrows elsewhere.
This is different from simply owning a tow cart.
The value is that the cart becomes part of the same W.I.T.C.H.™ workflow.
Transport bigger loads.
Drop material where the crew needs it.
Keep the wheelbarrows moving.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Mega Attachments better than The W.I.T.C.H.™ for moving mulch?
Mega Attachments can be useful for open-area hauling and dumping. The W.I.T.C.H.™ is the stronger overall workflow when mulch still needs distance, access, volume options, and final placement.
What is the main difference between Mega Attachments and The W.I.T.C.H.™?
Mega Attachments carries material in a front-mounted bucket. The W.I.T.C.H.™ is an Instant Connect and Release Wheelbarrow System that supports wheelbarrow towing, hand placement, and tow-cart capability.
How much does the Mega Attachments Mulch Bucket carry?
Many Mega Attachments Mulch Bucket kits are advertised with a 15 cubic foot tub. Working load ratings can vary by kit and mower model, so the mower, attachment, terrain, slope, and safe operating conditions all matter.
How much can The W.I.T.C.H.™ tow?
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is designed around a target wheelbarrow load of up to 500 lbs on compatible mower setups when properly configured. Actual capacity depends on the towing machine, wheelbarrow or tow cart, load, terrain, traction, slope, and safe operating conditions.
Which is better for tight access?
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is better for tight access because the wheelbarrow can release and be used by hand where the mower and front bucket may not belong.
Which is better for final mulch placement?
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is better for final placement because the wheelbarrow remains usable as a true wheelbarrow after release.
Does Mega Attachments have a volume advantage?
Mega Attachments can have a volume advantage over a standard wheelbarrow because it uses a front-mounted bucket. But volume is not the same as final placement. If material still needs to be moved again by hand, the wheelbarrow workflow may be more efficient.
Is rear towing better than carrying material out front?
Rear towing can be a more natural load path in many mowing setups because the mower pulls the load while the wheelbarrow or cart carries its own weight. Actual results depend on mower size, hydro system, traction, terrain, load weight, slope, and operating conditions.
Why can loading behind the mower help?
Loading material into a wheelbarrow or tow cart behind the mower can keep mulch, soil, dust, and debris farther away from the mower’s front components, engine area, belts, pulleys, and air intake.
Does The W.I.T.C.H.™ replace a bucket?
No. It solves a different problem. A bucket carries and dumps material. The W.I.T.C.H.™ can tow wheelbarrows for placement and use tow-cart capability when larger-volume staging makes sense.
Can The W.I.T.C.H.™ use a tow cart?
Yes, with the W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter and a compatible tow cart. Tow Cart Mode is useful when larger-volume transport or material staging makes more sense than repeated wheelbarrow trips into one area.
Bottom Line
Mega Attachments and The W.I.T.C.H.™ both help move material with a mower.
But they are not equal workflows.
Mega Attachments adds a front-mounted bucket to the mower.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ connects the mower, wheelbarrow, and tow cart into a more flexible hauling system.
Mega Attachments can make sense for open-area hauling where the mower can drive directly to the dump location.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ is stronger when the job needs distance, access, volume options, and true final placement.
It uses standard wheelbarrows many crews already own.
It can work with tow carts through the W.I.T.C.H.™ Cart Adapter.
It releases the wheelbarrow in seconds.
It keeps the material load behind the mower instead of carrying it out front.
It gives crews more than one way to move material.
Mega Attachments gives you a front bucket.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ gives you a workflow system.
The W.I.T.C.H.™ does not replace the wheelbarrow.
It unlocks it.
The mower handles the distance.
The wheelbarrow handles the placement.
We are not changing the wheelbarrow.
We are changing what it is capable of.
Nothing beats a wheelbarrow.
Until distance shows up on the jobsite.