Cougsfan
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2008
- Messages
- 1,568
- Location
- Eastern Washington State
- Tractor
- Ferguson TO35, Branson 4720CH
My '96 Dodge 4wd 1 ton has a snow plow mounted on the front that I use to plow the roads in our rural development. It has tire chains on the outside duallies. It snowed fairly heavily the night before I went on vacation and I did a quick plow of our roads. The last place I was plowing was the neighbors gravel driveway, which is long (maybe 1/2 mile), very narrow and very steep in one place. It has about a foot of snow on it covering solid ice. I made the mistake of trying to plow up hill on the steep, icy part. I had to get a good run at it in order to make it up the hill. The snow plow pushed the front end of the truck sideways on the ice at the end of the steepest part. The truck ended up in the ditch on the side of the hill. It is now setting high centered at about a 45 degree sideways angle (That's a guess, but it is pretty close to rolling over on its side). If it slides down hill anymore, the ditch gets much more pronounced and it will most likely roll the truck over.
I have a 50hp 4wd tractor that I tried to pull it out with but it only spins it's wheels. My neighbor borrowed a 100 hp tractor while I was gone and it won't pull it up the hill either, or pull it sideways back on the road. A tow truck won't even come out to where it is (It would get probably get stuck). There are no trees or rocks or anything to secure a come-a-long too. (it is an old wheat field). I could go up hill and sink my loader in the ground and use it as a pull point. Not sure my 2 ton come-along would budge a high centered 8,000 lb truck with a 1,000 lb or so snow plow mounted to it, anyway.
I will be back home in a couple of days. (My neighbor has been leaving his car on the main road at the bottom of the hill as he can't get drive it home) Any suggestions other than wait till spring? (might be harder then as everything turns to a clay based mud.)
I have a 50hp 4wd tractor that I tried to pull it out with but it only spins it's wheels. My neighbor borrowed a 100 hp tractor while I was gone and it won't pull it up the hill either, or pull it sideways back on the road. A tow truck won't even come out to where it is (It would get probably get stuck). There are no trees or rocks or anything to secure a come-a-long too. (it is an old wheat field). I could go up hill and sink my loader in the ground and use it as a pull point. Not sure my 2 ton come-along would budge a high centered 8,000 lb truck with a 1,000 lb or so snow plow mounted to it, anyway.
I will be back home in a couple of days. (My neighbor has been leaving his car on the main road at the bottom of the hill as he can't get drive it home) Any suggestions other than wait till spring? (might be harder then as everything turns to a clay based mud.)