Pilot
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2004
- Messages
- 1,219
- Location
- Oregon
- Tractor
- JD 770, Yanmar 180D, JD 420 (not running), had a Kubota B6200
Agree with Eddie, but add that you want to look carefully at trees that could fall on the house and take those down, too. Also, remember, trees grow, so trees that will be big enough to hit the house in 10-15 years should be considered for removal also.
Excavators are commonly used for logging around here. We've had them operate on slopes up to 40%, but for site prep work, not logging.
Are your house plans a proven design that you have seen in real life? Our house was built based on a new set of plans--I'm not sure that plan had ever been built before. We found during and after construction that there were several things that could have been done better and we would have seen most of them if we had been able to go thru a completed house. If it's a new custom design, go over the plans very carefully and place yourself in each room. And check on routing of utilities. One problem for us: A heat duct routing necessitated the master bath light switch be put outside the bathroom door, so in the middle of the night, if someone turns on the light when entering the light goes right in the face of the person still in bed. We had planned plenty of electrical outlets for where we wanted the bed to go--electric blanket, table lamps, alarm clocks, etc.--and had to move the bed to another location.
Excavators are commonly used for logging around here. We've had them operate on slopes up to 40%, but for site prep work, not logging.
Are your house plans a proven design that you have seen in real life? Our house was built based on a new set of plans--I'm not sure that plan had ever been built before. We found during and after construction that there were several things that could have been done better and we would have seen most of them if we had been able to go thru a completed house. If it's a new custom design, go over the plans very carefully and place yourself in each room. And check on routing of utilities. One problem for us: A heat duct routing necessitated the master bath light switch be put outside the bathroom door, so in the middle of the night, if someone turns on the light when entering the light goes right in the face of the person still in bed. We had planned plenty of electrical outlets for where we wanted the bed to go--electric blanket, table lamps, alarm clocks, etc.--and had to move the bed to another location.