Bobcats For Sale In New England

Bobcat of New Hampshire is an authorized Bobcat® dealer -- the largest in Northern New England. With two locations we serve customers throughout southern New Hampshire and surrounding states, as well as customers throughout central and northern New Hamsphire. Bobcat® skid-steers, compact track loaders, mini-excavators, innovative utility vehicles and their accessories are our primary business. Unlike smaller dealers, rental stores, and multi-brand dealers, we are robustly dedicated to the Bobcat® line of equipment -- the best selling, best quality line of Skid Steers, Mini Excavators, Compact Track Loaders, Mini Track Loaders, and Utility Vehicles Bobcat of Greater Springfield Bobcat of Rhode Island Welcome to the official website of Bobcat of Connecticut, Bobcat of Rhode Island, Bobcat of Greater Springfield, and Bobcat of Worcester. We proudly serve all of Connecticut, Rhode Island, Western Mass. and Worcester County MA. through our five conveniently located stores.
All stores feature fully stocked Sales, Service, Parts, and Rental departments. We carry the full line of Bobcat Brand Equipment, including Skid Steer Loaders, Compact Track Loaders, Mini Excavators, All Wheel Steer Loaders, Walk Behind Loaders, Utility Vehicles, and Utility Work Machines. In addition, we stock and rent a wide variety of Bobcat Attachments. We also offer a wide variety of other quality lines including Bandit Chippers & Stump grinders,  Towmaster Equipment Trailers, Protech Snow Pushers, Stihl Power Equipment, FAE and Fecon Forestry Equipment, Ryans Equipment Grapples, Buffalo Turbine Blowers, US Mower, MBW Compaction Products, and many others. Our Stratford, CT store is a full line Fisher snow plow and spreader dealer, and our Warwick, RI and Stratford, CT store carry Honda generators and pumps. We stock snow pushers for just about any size or type of machine, from skid steers to loaders, and everything in between. With Winter fast approaching, stop in soon to get the best selection of attachments for your machine, including Plows, V-plows, Snow Blowers, spreaders, and more!
Our Stratford, CT and Warwich, Rhode Island locations are your authorized Bandit dealers! Both locations have chippers and stump grinders in stock, along with parts and service for Bandit products.Laminate Flooring Insulation Underlay Reservations for winter rental machines have begun. Birch Toilet SeatOur clean, low hour machines go quick, so be sure to reserve yours today!Shorkie Puppies For Adoption In MichiganWe now rent Doosan Excavators and Wheel Loaders Use the below link to view the Bobcat Parts Catalog. Please not, Internet Explorer is required. We welcome American Express® Cards Click here for financing information and applications 20 Concord Street North, Reading, MA 01864 Bobcat of Boston is an authorized Bobcat® dealer -- one of the largest throughout New England.
We serve customers throughout Massachusetts with the largest inventory of attachments & parts in the Northeast! Bobcat® skid-steers, mini-excavators, innovative utility vehicles and their attachments are our primary business. Bobcat of Boston, Inc. now offers the complete line of Towmaster trailers, to all our customers in Eastern and Central Massachusetts. Bobcat of Boston, Inc.  located throughout Massachusetts, is the official dealer of choice for Bobcat and Towmaster products, including but not limited to excavators, skid steer loaders, compact track loaders, all wheel steer loaders, telehandlers, compact tractors, utility vehicles and attachments for all our equipment! We have a complete line of equipment trailers by Towmaster...not to mention the unique Toolcat Work machine. ASK A SALESMAN TODAY ABOUT OUR LARGE INVENTORY OF ATTACHMENTS at BobcatⓇ of Boston LIVE DEMOS l FOOD & DRINK l GREAT DEALS OPEN HOUSE AT BOBCAT OF BOSTON, INC. WEDNESDAY, JULY 20th, 11A.M. – 4P.M.
North Reading, MA 01864 Follow Bobcat of Boston on Facebook!Rock & Dirt the source for BOBCAT S185 Equipment & Machinery since 1950.was established in 1950 and has been around long enough to understand what our customers need.  We are customer service orientated, so we’ll listen to you and help choose the best option from our large selection of products to get your job done.  We are conveniently located in Falmouth ME, Hermon ME and Pembroke NH. QUALITY IS REMEMBERED LONG AFTER THE PRICE IS FORGOTTEN... We aim to provide complete solutions to your construction, industrial and mining needs. - skid steers, compact track loaders, excavators, toolcats and utility vehicles. / / Hensley- teeth, cutting edges, crushing parts and wear solutions. / - snow plow edges, carbide inserted edges. Kage - Snow Plow and Snow Pusher all in one. CM / Gunnebo/ / Liftex- hoists, chain, chain slings, wire rope, wire rope slings, nylon slings, shackles and related hardware.
/ Weber MT- compaction equipment, pumps and saws. - zero turn mowers, stand up and walk behind mowers, truck loaders and blowers. - steel and aluminum trench boxes, manhole and bedding boxes. Hand tools, lasers, cones, marking paint and construction signs. Towmaster- ramp, tilt and tag along trailers. Please feel free to browse through our inventory and/or  toll free 877-575-7459.Adult male bobcat in Bow, NH; photo courtesy of Diane Lowe. Select image for larger view. The most common wildcat in North America, the bobcat is a yellowish-brown or reddish-brown (more gray in winter) color with indistinct dark spotting and streaks along its body. The species gets its common name from its characteristic stubby, or “bobbed,” tail. The tail is only 4-7 inches in length with 2 or 3 black bars and a black tip above, while the underside is pale or white. Their upper legs have dark horizontal bands. The face has thin, black lines stretching onto broad cheek ruff and their ears are tufted.
Males are larger than females and bobcats stand 19-22 inches at the shoulder and 28-49 inches in length on average. They typically weigh between 15-35 pounds. New Hampshire Fish & Game partnered with the University of New Hampshire initiating a comprehensive bobcat study with on the ground work starting in the fall of 2009. Distribution, population abundance, habitat use, habitat connectivity, and methods to index populations were studied. This comprehensive research project was completed December 2014 and has provided a wealth of knowledge about bobcats in New Hampshire. More information, including Theses, can be found on the UNH website. Wildlife research in New Hampshire is funded in part by the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act. Bobcats are distributed from coast to coast in the US and from southern Canada to Mexico. Commonly confused with the Canada lynx, which is not known to breed in NH, the bobcat shares an overlapping historic range with its neighbor species in northern US and southern Canadian regions.
Bobcat populations have expanded their range and population throughout the United States over the last decade. Bobcat populations are found throughout New England. Rhode Island is considered to have a lowest population. In New Hampshire, bobcats are thought to have had a historic presence in the southwest corner of the state. Sighting data and roadkill losses indicate that bobcats now reside in all New Hampshire counties. Based on observation reports, bobcat numbers appear to have increased in New Hampshire over the last 20 years. Bobcats live in scrubby or broken forests (hardwood, coniferous or mixed), swamps, farmland, semi-deserts, scrubland, and rocky or bushy arid lands. Their home ranges vary in size depending on sex, season and prey distribution and abundance. Bobcats mark their territory with urine, feces, anal gland scent, and scrapes on physical markers, such as trees. Individuals have one natal den and other auxiliary dens for protection located throughout their home ranges.
Dens can be found in caves, hollow logs, brush piles, rock ledges, or stumps. Bobcats are predators that usually follow consistent hunting paths to prey on snowshoe hares and cottontails. However, their diet also includes mice, squirrels, woodchucks, moles, shrews, raccoons, foxes, domestic cats, grouse and other birds, reptiles, porcupines and skunks. The bobcat is capable of fasting during periods of limited food availability, but will occasionally kill large prey, such as deer and livestock, during harsh conditions. Bobcats are solitary except during mating periods. Males are sexually active year-round, but females are typically only in heat in February and March. A female and dominant male may mate several times after a series of “chases,” but the female may also mate with other males in his absence. Bobcats have a gestation period of 2 months and females give birth to a litter between late April and early May. Litters can range from 1-7 young, but are usually only 2 or 3.
The young begin exploring at one month and are weaned at two months. They hunt individually by fall, but stay with their mother until they are one year old. Bobcats are mostly vocal when threatened or during mating season. When in danger, a bobcat will cry out in a short, deep "cough-bark." However, the species is loudest when it yowls during breeding season. In normal conditions, the bobcat’s sound is often compared to a domestic cat. In New Hampshire, unregulated harvest of bobcats was common for nearly 200 years. Bounties began in 1809 and continued until 1973. By the 1970s, bobcat populations had plummeted and only a few heavily restricted licenses were issued in a limited annual hunting season. In 1989, Fish and Game closed the bobcat hunting and trapping seasons due to concern over bobcat population status. These seasons remain closed in New Hampshire. Regulated harvest of bobcats is allowed in Maine, Massachusetts and Vermont. Protection afforded by the Department’s 1989 closure, coupled with the apparent benefits to bobcats of a thriving turkey population and a healthy deer population, appears to have facilitated a recovery of bobcats in our state.
Anecdotal reports and observations in the late 1990s and early 2000s suggested a rebound in the bobcat population had occurred over the previous decade. The 2009 and 2010 solicitation of bobcat sightings, as well as capture data resulting from a newly initiated bobcat research study, offers preliminary data in support of a bobcat population recovery. Today, bobcat sightings have become relatively common, with observations being reported from throughout the state. That said, we should not lose sight of the fact that severe winters can exert notable influence on bobcat status, since bobcats are only modestly adapted to deal with the presence of prolonged deep snow. Future conservation efforts will likely continue to include the protection of critical bobcat habitat including large unfragmented tracts, which, among other things, helps reduce bobcat exposure to car collisions, which constitute a significant source of mortality, particularly in southern New Hampshire. What's the Difference Between Bobcats and Canada Lynx?