Tractors and wood! Show your pics

   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,701  
Lots of useful info in this thread for which I'm grateful to those sharing...

Unless I'm dropping a tree in the middle of no-where it is anything but stress free...

Always in wonder if those that make it look easy and do it safely...
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,702  
I made a 15 minute video of some of the new trails we cleared at the Little Hogback Community Forest (LHCF) in preparation for our upcoming timber harvest. (If 15 minutes is too long for you, the narration is still intelligible if you play it at 1.25X speed.)

We needed a better landing, improvements to some trails and some new ones put in to provide access for the harvest. The video shows some of the trail after it has been cleared and roughed in by the excavator we hired. It looks much better now than what you see here. I haven't gotten around to getting pictures or video since he went over it with the dozer.


We decided to do the trail clearing ourselves, to help keep the costs down. Several of the owners pitched in felling, limbing, and clearing things off the new trails. On parts of the trail the sidehill was too steep to access with any of the vehicles we had available, so we dropped, limbed and sectioned the trees, cleared as much as I could reach with the logging winch on my tractor (230' of cable, two 20' chains as an extension, and dropping the last trees toward the chain so we could grab the top were as far as we could go.) There was about 600 feet left where we had to leave anything we could not easily move by hand for the excavator to clear from the path. We'll go back and pick up most of it as firewood now that we can get down the trails. In all, we cleared about 3400' of new trails.

Wherever possible, we kept the slope of the trails under 7% grade. This allows us to use broad based dips for erosion control, rather than waterbars. Our trails are also used for recreation, so they see more regular traffic. We don't allow motorized vehicles other than for forest management work, but part of how we accomplish our management goals is through firewood harvesting by any members with an interest. So we do see more regular vehicle traffic over time than what a typical closed logging trail would see. We find the broad based dips hold up better over time and require less maintenance, but they just don't work on steeper slopes.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,703  
Mr. Skeans, in that first picture (Image 495)...I can see a huge Tyrannosaurus Rex coming up behind that harvester!

The landscape looks almost tropical...maybe it's the big ferns, the underbrush and the tall trees with no low limbs.

Great setting for a dinosaur movie!
LOL I asked him a while back if "things" watch him at work.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,705  
Mr. Skeans, in that first picture (Image 495)...I can see a huge Tyrannosaurus Rex coming up behind that harvester!

The landscape looks almost tropical...maybe it's the big ferns, the underbrush and the tall trees with no low limbs.

Great setting for a dinosaur movie!

I take it you’ve never been over the PNW? Those trees are on the short side 125-150’ range as far as the brush goes that’s after an hour ripping out huge amounts of vine maples to save bars and chains. This side of the country is completely different then back east in the late 90’s early 2000’s we went back east a few times it always was amazing how little brush you guys have by comparison to the wet coast.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,708  
I made a 15 minute video of some of the new trails we cleared at the Little Hogback Community Forest (LHCF) in preparation for our upcoming timber harvest. (If 15 minutes is too long for you, the narration is still intelligible if you play it at 1.25X speed.)

We needed a better landing, improvements to some trails and some new ones put in to provide access for the harvest. The video shows some of the trail after it has been cleared and roughed in by the excavator we hired. It looks much better now than what you see here. I haven't gotten around to getting pictures or video since he went over it with the dozer.


We decided to do the trail clearing ourselves, to help keep the costs down. Several of the owners pitched in felling, limbing, and clearing things off the new trails. On parts of the trail the sidehill was too steep to access with any of the vehicles we had available, so we dropped, limbed and sectioned the trees, cleared as much as I could reach with the logging winch on my tractor (230' of cable, two 20' chains as an extension, and dropping the last trees toward the chain so we could grab the top were as far as we could go.) There was about 600 feet left where we had to leave anything we could not easily move by hand for the excavator to clear from the path. We'll go back and pick up most of it as firewood now that we can get down the trails. In all, we cleared about 3400' of new trails.

Wherever possible, we kept the slope of the trails under 7% grade. This allows us to use broad based dips for erosion control, rather than waterbars. Our trails are also used for recreation, so they see more regular traffic. We don't allow motorized vehicles other than for forest management work, but part of how we accomplish our management goals is through firewood harvesting by any members with an interest. So we do see more regular vehicle traffic over time than what a typical closed logging trail would see. We find the broad based dips hold up better over time and require less maintenance, but they just don't work on steeper slopes.
I just did some off-site reading about your land coop. It sounds like a very unique opportunity which you and others are involved in. 👍
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,709  
Poplar tends to be short lived (+-70 years) and needs sunlight. If you have oaks the stand is probably a bit older. I like to cut it in winter when the tree's energy is stored in the roots. The following spring it will send out root sprouts for an unbelievable distance; by the end of the year I can have sprouts 5 feet tall. 👍
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #18,710  
Not sure I like the green but I guess anything I use is going to change the color of the wood.
Just think of it as camo...
 

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