Appalachickens
Crowing
If I were dealing with just red mud, that might work. But I’m not. I’m in the area the song “Rocky Top” was written about (“Corn don’t grow at all on Rocky Top, dirt’s too rocky by far”). The upside is we were able to build the foundation and fireplace of our house with stone from the property. The downside is you can’t dig two inches without hitting rock. Sometimes really large rocks. Sometimes coal. And what isn’t rock is trees. Also, the idea of trying to get a wheelbarrow around on my land made me giggle.I just use a grading shovel and a wheel borrow. Dig up the high part, place you some pvc 6"-8"/gravel down at the low end... You use a pickaxe first to break up the redmud/clay and the quartz. Then shovel it out to the wheelborrow and dump it on top of your gravel/pipe.
The pipe prevents your water from pooling, I make my runs about 25'x25'. Then plant your fruit trees (mullberry and hazelnut does good in that fresh hard red mud you dug up) along the outside (to provide snacks/cover for hawks.
Hills aren't bad. IF you need more dirt, I got mine by digging into one of the red mud hills and dug out a root cellar. Use, used tires for walls support for free.