RS I was just saying how it is around here. We got good neighbors and others that would shoot you as easy as look at you.
Yeah ... same story all over ain't it ?
A 15 ton skidder is nothing to what these farmers use and a pipe line should take way more than that if in the ground the right depth. I would doubt they are just a few feet deep anywhere.
I've seen it with my own eyes - when they replaced the valve right near where they were running the skidder ...
I was standing next to the crew that replaced it and it was not all that deep.
In fact, they left the old valve on my property:
And the depth was confirmed by the guy from the gas company.
For sure not around here and in the video they drilled into it. It did not blow from driving over it. Skidder tires and large and wide to reduce soil compaction so they don't put that much pressure down even loaded. Part of forest management requirements. So I would not be worried about that unless your pipes are only a foot under ground.
The ruts - in the
wet ground - from the skidder that I've
personally observed are at least a foot deep ... easy.
The guy from the gas company - and one of the loggers - both claimed that they 2' deep in spots.
I worked on log skidder engineering development in the late 70s and early 80s on Cat 518 & 528 models built at Aurora at the time. So I got a clue when it comes to skidders.
Don't doubt it in the least.
However, you are not here personally observing the conditions on the ground.
And your assumptions about how deep a line should/might be buried are just that: assumptions.
I don't like clear cutting wood but a lot do it. Seems to me select cut is much better. But like so much,,it is about the money$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Yup ... that's exactly what it's about.
Unfortunately, greed overrode any and all considerations about
the safety of others ...
After all, the property owner himself wasn't going to be here onsite while they were doing the work ... so why worry, right ?