leonz
Super Member
Leonz,
Could you tell me what grouser tracks are? I have never heard of them. I a curious, what exactly would you imagine a dozer doing in my woods? I don't really use the blade so much as I want to shred the dense vegetation and leave the few remaining trees. If you look at the pictures I sent, that is basically what I want to do.
Also, could you explain to me how I am potentially at risk when I am clearing brush the way I am. I thought I was going pretty safe with the LX4 leading the way and only taking 2-3 foot "bites" at a time. even those bite were slow as I either lowered the LX4 onto brush and then moved forward through cleared ground, or I slowly backed in with the LX4, sort of "probing" in and careful to move slow enough that I would not strike a log hard. basically if I felt the nudge I stopped, moved forward, checked for obstructions, then moved back again. Overall, it was a very slow process, but faster than doing it by hand. In an afternoon I had cleared some nice patches and exposed logs preventing further movement. Thats where the chainsaw would come in and I would cut only those logs that I could tell were safe--not spring poles or the like.
I am wary of the underside, but that is why I was going backwards--to clear before material could even come into contact with the machine and especially its underside. Trust me when I say that I did not mow/clear unless I could see what I was clearing.
I thought I was being safe, but maybe you have better alternatives.
Thank you very much for you knowledge and insights
SI2305
There are two types of dozer tracks either finish tracks
or grouser tracks.
The finish tracks are for landscaping and near flat finishing
of an excavation prior to seeding.
A "Grouser Track" is a track with a pair of extended
vertical teeth on each pad that aids in providing
traction for the dozer when digging and moving piles
of dirt and in land clearing.
About your woods:
A small dozer or crawler excavator wih a long boom and
a thumb will solve 99 percent of your issues with this property.
The dozer will be able to dig up the logs that have dropped and
begun to sink into the ground and either push them out or chain
them and drag them with a helper setting a choker chain or cable.
The crawler excavator can be very advantageous for land clearing and selective thinning where it can drag the downed logs out of the mess
or bury them if they are beyond use for firewood.
The term is referred to as shovel logging where the boom and thumb
pull the logs out and set them a side if they are useable for firewood.
It would be worth looking at an aerial photo of the property if you
can have an aerial photo taken if none exist that are in great detail.
The reason I suggest this is that you are essentially flying blind into
your woods doing this and that-
All your doing is gaining experience in land clearing BUT you do not
have a road map to gio by or a topographic survey for the property
(I am assuming you do not have a topo map)
Your property does not look so dense that a dozer with winch or crawler excavator with a thumb would be wasted money-if it was so badly damaged by winds The shovel logging method for land clearing(total removal) is the normal state of affairs.
The othert issue is drainage you do not appear to have any and thats a big no no!
SO anyway I hope I have given you some things to think about, and you have to realise you cannot or will not be able to save a lot of timber as the damage has already been done from the overgrowth and reduced sunlight.