Since we're going to talk about technique, I too would avoid that area with the tractor like the plague. Even with duals you're going to at least tear up the area, and probably get good and stuck.
What did you intend to do to improve drainage without digging a trench? Other than re-grading the entire area... Those are really the only two practical choices, and as someone said, you can't work mud.
Really your only choice to remedy the immediate problem is a trench. That may be better handled by a backhoe or trackhoe, something that can sit up where it's high and dry and reach down in to dig the ditch from the side, much like a roadside ditch. You'll need to hire some heavy equipment to un-stuck the 300 after you bury it, so you may as well hire them outright to do the actual work.
Later on in the spring you can bury a 4" drainage tile and re-grade the area.
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Today's Featured Article - Box Plow Blues - by Tom Schwarz. One of the first implements most tractor owners obtain is the box plow. For very little money, this piece of equipment promises to plow and flatten any hill or vale on your ranch road or farm. At least that's what I thought! As simple as a box plow appears, it can be rather challenging to make work correctly. In our sandy soils of Florida, traction is king. You can never have wide enough tires or heavy enough weights to get all the traction you want … unless you own a monster tractor. U
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