Now for Lesson #2. Take good notes; there will be a test later.
I was able to haul the trailer load of sand without closing the gates on the back of the bed, just as I planned. My tractor really felt pretty stable considering the load behind me was about twice my tractor's weight. As I backed into the garden spot across dry clay fill, I noticed the clay seemed a bit spongy, but I just chalked it up to compression under the heavy trailer load. Little did I know that the top was dry, but below that top layer the clay was damp and malleable. Uh-oh!
So in my brilliant (uneducated) brain, I decided that dumping part of the load would make things easier. It had worked on the last load, why not this one too? It didn't dawn on me that I would be putting more weight on the trailer wheels as the bed went up and the load shifted toward the rear. "Class was in session" for only a few minutes when I watched the trailer tires sink into the clay all the way up to their axles.

My now educated brain realized that you should stop and pull the trailer to solid ground before attempting to dump it. Too late! For Lesson #3, today we learn how to get a trailer unstuck.
Luckily, I wa able to get about 1/2 the load on the ground. I also had some long 4x6s nearby and knew an old trick I had used to get a vehicle unstuck by using the hydraulic lift bed as a jack. I placed two 4x6s under the rear of the dump bed and then raised the bed. As the bed came up, the back goes down, but I had the 4x6s there, so the bed lifted the whole trailer. There was enough room under the wheels for me to put boards down and get the trailer axles out of the dirt.
After letting the trailer back down on the ramps, I used all the power my tractor could muster and even the loader digging while curling down for extra pull. The trailer lifted slowly and moved forward out of the ruts. Whew! What a relief.
Well, that's enough lessons for today. I really learned alot about this trailer from one afternoon's work. Maybe I'll get careful enough to really increase productivity next time.

After all that, I just parked the trailer and put the battery on the charger. I'd had enough for one day.