Both can dig the trench. But speed, backfill quality, soil conditions, frost depth requirements, and access constraints make one significantly better for most irrigation jobs. Here's how to choose.
The right answer for irrigation trenching in Canada is almost always the trencher — until the soil gets rocky, the access gets tight, or the depth requirement pushes past what your chain can handle. Then the excavator becomes necessary. Understanding where that line is will save you from renting the wrong machine.
Let's work through it systematically.
In the US, irrigation lines are often installed at 18–24 inches depth and seasonal blowout is standard. In Canada, you're dealing with frost penetration that makes that approach unworkable in most of the country. Irrigation lines that freeze break. Even with annual blowout, lines left at shallow depth risk damage during cold snaps.
Minimum installation depths by region:
| Region | Typical Frost Depth | Recommended Min. Installation Depth |
|---|---|---|
| BC Lower Mainland / Victoria | 12–24 inches | 18–24 inches (with seasonal blowout) |
| BC Interior / Okanagan | 24–42 inches | 30–36 inches |
| Alberta (southern) | 36–48 inches | 42–48 inches |
| Alberta (northern / Edmonton area) | 48–60 inches | 48–54 inches |
| Saskatchewan | 54–72 inches | 54–60 inches |
| Manitoba | 54–72 inches | 54–60 inches |
| Ontario (southern) | 24–36 inches | 30–36 inches |
| Ontario (northern) | 48–66 inches | 48–54 inches |
| Quebec (southern) | 36–48 inches | 42–48 inches |
This matters for the trencher vs excavator comparison because it affects which tool can even reach the required depth. A standard skid steer chain trencher in the 48-inch depth range is relatively common and affordable. A chain trencher reaching 60–72 inches is a specialty unit that not all rental companies stock. A mini excavator with a 12–16 inch bucket can reach 8–10 feet without straining.
In Saskatchewan and Manitoba — where irrigation is growing rapidly and frost depths are severe — an excavator often wins on depth alone.
A skid steer chain trencher is the faster machine for clean, straight runs in cooperative soil. In loamy or sandy soil with no significant rock or roots, a chain trencher can lay 50–100 feet of trench per hour at 24–36 inch depth. On a 500-foot irrigation run, that's under a day of work. The trench is narrow — typically 4–6 inches wide — which means minimal surface disturbance and an easy backfill.
The narrow kerf is actually an irrigation advantage. Pipe is only 1–2 inches in diameter. You don't need a wide trench. The 4–6 inch chain trencher produces a trench that's exactly as wide as necessary and nothing more.
Trencher advantages for irrigation:
Trencher limitations:
A 1.5–3 tonne mini excavator — a Kubota U35, Bobcat E35, or similar — is the other common tool for residential and acreage irrigation trenching. It's slower on straight runs but handles obstacles, depth variation, and tight spaces that defeat a trencher.
At 36-inch depth in clean soil, an experienced operator might dig 20–40 feet of trench per hour with a mini excavator. That's roughly half the speed of a trencher in comparable conditions. On a 500-foot run, you're looking at 2–3 days of excavator work vs 1 day of trencher work. Time costs money.
Excavator advantages for irrigation:
Excavator limitations:
| Soil Type | Trencher Performance | Mini Excavator Performance | Better Choice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prairie loam / black soil | Excellent — fast, clean | Good but slower | Trencher |
| Sandy soil (SK, MB interior) | Excellent — easy cutting | Good | Trencher |
| BC clay (wet) | Good — clay balls up but manageable | Good — bucket handles clay | Trencher (slight edge on speed) |
| Glacial till with cobbles | Poor — rock damage risk | Good — bucket handles cobbles | Excavator |
| Canadian Shield (bedrock near surface) | Very poor — chain damage | Requires hammer; possible | Excavator + hammer attachment |
| River valley clay (compacted) | Moderate — slow, wear on chain | Good | Excavator |
| Existing lawn / turf | Good — narrow kerf, easy repair | Moderate — wider disturbance | Trencher |
This is where the trencher earns its place for residential irrigation work. A 4–6 inch wide trench is easy to backfill and compact. The spoil is right beside the trench. Push it back, tamp it, done. In established turf, a narrow trencher cut heals quickly — typically 2–4 weeks to green over in spring/summer conditions.
An excavator trench is wider and the spoil is piled further from the trench edge (the machine needs room to swing). Backfill requires more work. Turf restoration on an excavated irrigation trench takes longer and may require topsoil and overseeding depending on how much the surface was disturbed.
For residential customers who want minimal visible impact after installation — and irrigation clients almost always want this — the trencher wins on restoration quality.
Irrigation systems often run in constrained areas — along fence lines, between buildings, through established gardens, near mature trees. Both machines have access trade-offs.
A walk-behind trencher can access very tight spots — 24–30 inch wide models are available for confined spaces. A skid steer trencher is wider but still fits through a standard 36-inch gate opening in most configurations.
A 1.5-tonne mini excavator is typically 47–55 inches wide (Kubota U17/U25 range), which doesn't fit through standard fence gates without removing panels. The 1-tonne micro-excavator class (Kubota U10, Bobcat E10) gets to 31–33 inches and does fit through gates. These micro machines have limited digging depth and force, but for irrigation at 24–30 inch depth in cooperative soil, they work.
Near trees: trenchers and tree roots don't mix. A chain trencher running through an established root zone of a large tree is destructive to the tree — major roots severed by a chain trencher don't recover. Hand dig near trees, or excavate carefully with a mini excavator where you can control exactly what you're cutting.
| Skid Steer Trencher (rental) | Mini Excavator (rental) | |
|---|---|---|
| Day rate (typical Canadian) | $400–$700/day (trencher attachment only, assumes you have a skid steer) | $450–$750/day (1.5–3 tonne) |
| With skid steer machine rental | $800–$1,400/day total | $450–$750/day (machine + attachment in one) |
| Purchase (trencher attachment) | $5,000–$12,000 new; $2,500–$7,000 used | $28,000–$55,000 new (machine) |
| Speed advantage | 2–3x faster on clean soil runs | Slower but handles obstacles |
If you own a skid steer, the trencher attachment is the more economical ownership proposition for irrigation work. A quality trencher attachment handles most residential and acreage irrigation jobs and pays for itself on moderate job volume. The excavator is a different machine entirely — much higher capital commitment for capabilities you may not need.
See our skid steer trencher attachments guide and the auger vs trencher comparison for more on trencher selection.
A few practical points specific to irrigation installation:
Header line vs lateral lines: The main supply header often runs at full frost depth; lateral lines to heads may run shallower. Using the trencher at depth for the main run and a shallower walk-behind trencher for laterals is a common approach that combines efficiency and cost.
Irrigation pipe is flexible: Unlike conduit or rigid pipe, poly irrigation tubing can be coiled on a reel and pulled into a trench while the trencher moves forward. Some trencher setups allow pipe to be fed directly into the trench behind the chain, laying pipe in a single pass. This is much faster than laying pipe separately.
Before You Dig: Call before you dig. BC One Call (1-800-474-6886), Alberta One-Call (1-800-242-3447), Ontario's Dig Safe, and equivalent services in every province are mandatory prior to excavation. Irrigation trenching regularly uncovers unmarked lines — this is especially common on older rural properties where nobody marked private buried cable, electrical, or water runs. The service is free.
Seasonal timing: Irrigation trenching in late April through early June (post-frost, pre-dry) is the ideal window in most of Canada. Soil is workable but not yet baked hard. August trenching in prairie clay is significantly harder for both machines.
In the Okanagan, the Fraser Valley, and southern Ontario — where frost isn't catastrophic and soils are cooperative — the trencher handles most residential and acreage irrigation with far less hassle and cost. In the prairies and northern regions, depth requirements often force the excavator decision.
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