Big tree

/ Big tree
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Thanks for the advice on the root ball. It did start shifting on me as I kept getting closer to it. I push it over with the tractor and was able to cut the rest of it. I have all of it cut up now, just have to deal with the root ball now.
 
/ Big tree #12  
Maybe you could flip the root ball onto its side, use your backhoe to dig a deeper hole, tip the root ball over (tree trunk vertical) into the hole, then coverup the trunk/root ball/hole with all the dirt that was removed? That way there would be no need to drag/dispose of the root ball and there would be no need to find more dirt to fill the hole.
 
/ Big tree #13  
I'm kinda like Galaxie on his thinking. Don't like burying or cutting flush. All of the root balls I've pulled on my property go to my burn pile however I can get it there. Granted it may take a year or 3 to get the stump(s) dry enough to burn. But I usually have brush piles to put up against it to burn every couple of months. Kind of interesting to watch a stump burn with all that dirt on it. Burns through the veins of the roots. Thanks for the pictures. That is one BIG stump!
 
/ Big tree #14  
I'm doubtful you'll be able to even drag it unless you use a sled. That's one big root ball! I dug out a maple when I first go my tractor. Root ball was big, but not as big as yours. I broke a 3000 lb chain trying to drag it down hill I (no sled). Then I bought a 10000 lb chain and it was all my CK25 gear could do to pull it down hill (steep down hill too) into the woods: tractor was grunting and all fours would take turns spinning.

Later I dug up a double stemmed tulip poplar one about the size of your tree. I could'nt get it out of the hole (no real room to make a ramp). I ended up burying it in place. It's been 4 years now and so far no sinkage where I planted it.

Yours looks to be pine, and so might be lighter than the maple. Keep us posted on how you make out, and be careful with that heavy beast.
 
/ Big tree #15  
I had a big fir tree that I did the same thing to and I left a long stem/trunk on it and then I turned it upside down. It looks like a toadstool. The couple that lives there planted ivy around it and now it is a big green Toadstool! :thumbsup:
 
/ Big tree #16  
If you have a pressure washer with a jet or bullet nozzle, you can cut most of not all the dirt off the roots. a Turbo nozzle works even better.
 
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