Woody65
Gold Member
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2012
- Messages
- 478
- Location
- East Northport and Oneonta NY
- Tractor
- John Deere 4300 HST 4wd
So, a couple of months ago a tornado microburst with 80mph winds touched down on my property. This type of weather doesn't happen often in these parts. It landed in an area on my mountainside that is thick with 100' tall Hemlock and Pine trees. It also took down a stray tree here and there on the property. Probably 60-70 trees in all.
I surveyed the damage and conceded that it was probably a little much for me to handle. I can cut down the occasional tree and firewood but these massive trees averaging 24-30" in diameter and 100' tall laying over like you threw a box of toothpicks is a bit much. That in itself is hard for me to say cause I will and have tackled many a job when I was young and didn't have the funds to pay someone else. I start asking around for loggers to go in and cut it all up into logs and skid them out to a landing where I would deal with them. Around here, loggers only want hardwood. Pine and Hemlock are not worth their time. At least they would be off the ground ( no worms eating them) and the mess would be gone. Well, no takers. I was willing to pay them whatever they wanted within reason but could not get anyone to even look at it.
I didn't want them to go to waste. Didn't want it turned into firewood, and wanted the mess gone. So, I decided that I would carefully cut them into 12' logs, skid them down the mountain ( had to make a totally new trail) stage them on a landing near my barn and mill them into boards and beams for the many projects I have on my to do list. ( lean too's for both sides of the barn, pavilion with roof for picnic tables, elevated hunting blinds etc. )
Mind you, I live 250 miles away and still work M-F 9-5. So, I purchased a Woodland Mills 30" mill with extension to accommodate 16' logs and a MUTS trailer for all the firewood. I am using my JD 4300 to skid the logs with the 3pt and the grapple to move em around. If I need some extra muscle I use my mini ex, a Bobcat 331, to move them. I will say, it has been a lot of work. But rewarding. I have to look at the situation a couple of ways before I decide on a cut because the pressure and tension on these downed trees is quite substantial.
Enjoy the pics...
Some pics of the trees






Logs at the landing and getting milled.




I got 11 1x10's and 4 1x6's 12' long out of the first log.
The equipment






I surveyed the damage and conceded that it was probably a little much for me to handle. I can cut down the occasional tree and firewood but these massive trees averaging 24-30" in diameter and 100' tall laying over like you threw a box of toothpicks is a bit much. That in itself is hard for me to say cause I will and have tackled many a job when I was young and didn't have the funds to pay someone else. I start asking around for loggers to go in and cut it all up into logs and skid them out to a landing where I would deal with them. Around here, loggers only want hardwood. Pine and Hemlock are not worth their time. At least they would be off the ground ( no worms eating them) and the mess would be gone. Well, no takers. I was willing to pay them whatever they wanted within reason but could not get anyone to even look at it.
I didn't want them to go to waste. Didn't want it turned into firewood, and wanted the mess gone. So, I decided that I would carefully cut them into 12' logs, skid them down the mountain ( had to make a totally new trail) stage them on a landing near my barn and mill them into boards and beams for the many projects I have on my to do list. ( lean too's for both sides of the barn, pavilion with roof for picnic tables, elevated hunting blinds etc. )
Mind you, I live 250 miles away and still work M-F 9-5. So, I purchased a Woodland Mills 30" mill with extension to accommodate 16' logs and a MUTS trailer for all the firewood. I am using my JD 4300 to skid the logs with the 3pt and the grapple to move em around. If I need some extra muscle I use my mini ex, a Bobcat 331, to move them. I will say, it has been a lot of work. But rewarding. I have to look at the situation a couple of ways before I decide on a cut because the pressure and tension on these downed trees is quite substantial.
Enjoy the pics...
Some pics of the trees






Logs at the landing and getting milled.




I got 11 1x10's and 4 1x6's 12' long out of the first log.
The equipment





