Also in NY it has been an unusual winter. No frost in the ground to speak of, lots of mud and slop.
It froze a couple of inches last night so I'm going to go down to my stone/gravel pile and get a bucket load
to put in a low spot in the driveway that hasn't stopped settling from a new culvert install last fall.
Just walking around in the afternoon sinking an inch or so.
I have very few good deliveries on my driveway as it's a quarter mile steep uphill with an S curve in it.
Once snow season starts I put a large tote down by the road for normal delivery's. Most anything large
or on a trailer I meet them at the bottom and unload them there. It is possible to get a truck tractor (day cab)and
short trailer or a large box truck if you are a good driver otherwise it's a disaster. I've had UPS get stuck,
even had a pizza delivery get stuck this fall. In my ground when there is no frost and it's waterlogged and soggy there is almost no bottom.
It always amazes me the number of delivery drivers that seem to want to try the driveway and screw up.
So far I've been able to get most of them unstuck or back on the driveway with my tractors, did have to borrow one of the
farms tractors once. My tractors are 55-80 HP and 10,000 pounds plus so fairly capable. It will be interesting once I get my newest
project up and working good a NH 8160 so 12,000+ pounds and 90 hp. Doesn't everybody need more tractors

But it is easy to get stuck in these conditions and even more so with incompetent drivers.