RSR
Platinum Member
Hey - someone else with a Frostbite style grapple. We seem to be in the minority here.This is my entry in the "Big-Rock Show". It is evident that grapples can work well at plucking them out.
View attachment 659969
gg
Hey - someone else with a Frostbite style grapple. We seem to be in the minority here.This is my entry in the "Big-Rock Show". It is evident that grapples can work well at plucking them out.
View attachment 659969
gg
:thumbsup: IT! My hole would have been three times that trying to get that one dislodged and then I would have realized that I ain't lifting with my BH and thumb. How much do you gather it weighs?
Hey - someone else with a Frostbite style grapple. We seem to be in the minority here.
Try this one with a DK40se and a $500 Millonzi grapple: View attachment 659944View attachment 659943View attachment 659942
Too bad that they don't make those Millonzi's anymore... apparently he died and nobody picked up the torch.
Exactly what happened. His grapple was basic but plenty strong and pretty light. WAY less expensive than some of the grapples coming out of North Carolina and heavily promoted here on TBN. A basic grapple is a very simple fabrication job and the design is well known. No reason they have to cost well over a grand.
smaller unit,
Nobody wants that!
Nobody wants that!



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First though I had to remove the pin cherry and other shrubs growing out of the top of the pile.
It took about 15 minutes to pull them and bring them down to the stump dump. Before I attack the other 10 piles though I will go through and cut the trees... on a day when it isn稚 90+ degrees.
I finally picked up a 54 MTL this week so I can join the fun. If my loader is akin to having a thumb on my hand, the grapple has to be like a pair of vise grips. :thumbsup: About 10 or 11 years ago I had a 2 acre field reclaimed, and the stumps piled down so that I could reclaim the topsoil later. I finally attacked my first pile today expecting to find a lot of rotten wood; instead I found that they’ve pretty much rotted down and I have some pretty nice looking loam.View attachment 660361View attachment 660360
There’s got to be some N2 in that soil from all of those stumps.
First though I had to remove the pin cherry and other shrubs growing out of the top of the pile.View attachment 660359
It took about 15 minutes to pull them and bring them down to the stump dump. Before I attack the other 10 piles though I will go through and cut the trees... on a day when it isn稚 90+ degrees.
Instead of cutting, can you push them over and pull them out with the grapple?
Instead of cutting, can you push them over and pull them out with the grapple?
I finally picked up a 54 MTL this week so I can join the fun. If my loader is akin to having a thumb on my hand, the grapple has to be like a pair of vise grips. :thumbsup: About 10 or 11 years ago I had a 2 acre field reclaimed, and the stumps piled down so that I could reclaim the topsoil later. I finally attacked my first pile today expecting to find a lot of rotten wood; instead I found that they’ve pretty much rotted down and I have some pretty nice looking loam.View attachment 660361View attachment 660360
There’s got to be some N2 in that soil from all of those stumps.
First though I had to remove the pin cherry and other shrubs growing out of the top of the pile.View attachment 660359
It took about 15 minutes to pull them and bring them down to the stump dump. Before I attack the other 10 piles though I will go through and cut the trees... on a day when it isn稚 90+ degrees.