Rockbadchild
Elite Member
yeah for sure … I thought so, I counted 6 planks at 5.5 inch each but figured the picture was angled a bit so I hold off 3 inch on my prediction.33" on the big end, it's gonna be fun on the mill!
SR
yeah for sure … I thought so, I counted 6 planks at 5.5 inch each but figured the picture was angled a bit so I hold off 3 inch on my prediction.33" on the big end, it's gonna be fun on the mill!
SR
It wouldn't even fit on mine!33" on the big end, it's gonna be fun on the mill!
SR
For many years, I was cutting on the land of an older friend, and he had 30 acres of mature PA hardwoods... mostly oak with ash and poplar. We'd leave the poplars rot in the woods, grab all the oak we could, and take the ash and others (sassafras) as we had time or space for them.20-28" logs are kind of my wheelhouse, any bigger and it gets to be a pain on my mill.
Good winch is a must, but to be honest, I'd buy one that's faster and less strong than what I have. I bought a 7500# job, which is more likely to break the trailer than anything else, if it ever hits a snag and exerts maximum pull. I only bought that model because I got more than half off, due to a clearance sale, and I had plans to "downgrade" it with gearing out of their faster 5000# variant... but never did.Maybe a combo of a good winch and a non-expanded metal ramp will be the ticket. I was not looking forward to fabbing up an arch anyways. Ain't nobody got time for that. What would you recommend for a ramp system that would work better than what you have?
how old you think these are ? have you ever count it's rings ?For many years, I was cutting on the land of an older friend, and he had 30 acres of mature PA hardwoods... mostly oak with ash and poplar. We'd leave the poplars rot in the woods, grab all the oak we could, and take the ash and others (sassafras) as we had time or space for them.
Anyway, he was getting up in years, so I'd leave all the really friendly sizes for him, and bring home the stupid big'uns for myself. Lots and lots and lots of trees over 36" diameter, in fast most of the dying ash were right around the 40" mark, making me think they must've all started around the same time.
The largest single rounds I ever brought home were from a 60" diameter white oak that was rotten in the center from the ground up to a height of maybe 18 feet. I left the rotten part in the woods, but brought home everything above that. We figured single rounds at Ø49" x 20" must have weighed over 1400 lb. each. It was fun getting them onto the splitter.
I used to take pics of this, but once it became routine and less novel, got lazy about that. Here's an old one of my buddy skidding some of mine out of the woods, he has since passed.
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Here's some even older, with a 36" bar on my saw for scale, and my old 855 struggling to stack some "medium" (36-inch? tractor tires are 33") rounds after bringing them home. I don't move rounds anymore, only whole logs now that I have a tractor that can actually lift them.
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Good winch is a must, but to be honest, I'd buy one that's faster and less strong than what I have. I bought a 7500# job, which is more likely to break the trailer than anything else, if it ever hits a snag and exerts maximum pull. I only bought that model because I got more than half off, due to a clearance sale, and I had plans to "downgrade" it with gearing out of their faster 5000# variant... but never did.
As to the tailgate, you don't want anything that's going to act as an air brake, speaking in sailing or aeronautical terms. If it's solid, you'll likely want it to be removable for driving. However that might also go along with making it easily-replaceable, since it's going to take a beating. One easy option is plywood or aluminum plate, and some carriage bolts with fender washers and wing nuts. Install it when pulling logs, remove and stow it when driving.
Using a scrap of loose plywood has always worked well enough for me, excepting the fact that I sometimes forget to bring one with me. Thankfully, nearly every time that has ever happened, someone else on-site has had something I could use.
Not usually. I had tried a few times in the past, but it’s between tedious and impossible on some of that really old stuff. I’m surrounded by old houses (late 1600’s and up), and live in one myself, but somehow find old trees much less interesting… they all burn the same!how old you think these are ? have you ever count it's rings ?
yeah I was just curious, a search I did suggested that white Oak as generally 5 to 10 rings per inch so at 55'' it would be anywhere between 250 to 400 years old, that 6' would be between 360 to 720 years old, that's pretty insane to me...Not usually. I had tried a few times in the past, but it’s between tedious and impossible on some of that really old stuff. I’m surrounded by old houses (late 1600’s and up), and live in one myself, but somehow find old trees much less interesting… they all burn the same!
I do recall that the 6 ft. diameter white oak I mentioned above was taken from a local church’s picnic grove, and we have documentation showing it was already a large tree by the early 1800’s, as the minutes recorded at the picnic talk about it being hosted under the shade of that tree. I think one of the guys at the church tried counting rings from the not-rotten part of the tree, but don’t remember the result.
There are a few discs cut from large or significant trees in the area, one at a church just up the road, where someone has tagged various rings with years and significant events such as the Civil War or Rev. War. Those are neat… but I’d burn ‘em.![]()
That’s cool. But that tree was only 6 ft. diameter at knee height, where I left the stump. The diameter at breast height (DBH) usually used by harvesters was probably only 60 inches on that tree.yeah I was just curious, a search I did suggested that white Oak as generally 5 to 10 rings per inch so at 55'' it would be anywhere between 250 to 400 years old, that 6' would be between 360 to 720 years old, that's pretty insane to me...
I'm glad it was only "suggested", because this white oak had just over 100 rings,yeah I was just curious, a search I did suggested that white Oak as generally 5 to 10 rings per inch so at 55'' it would be anywhere between 250 to 400 years old, that 6' would be between 360 to 720 years old, that's pretty insane to me...