Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac

   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac #141  
Yeah, it is the wood handling that makes it more work. Of course, I could use the exercise, but when I'm on cord #4 and have two more to load up and I'm carrying the same piece of wood for the 3rd time.... it makes me wonder if I could do it more intelligently. :laughing:

I think I mentioned this before, but lets see how many times MossRoad touches a piece of firewood before it actually heats his home:

1. Drop tree.
2. Chain tree and drag from forest.
3. Unchain tree.
4. Cut tree into pieces.
5. Toss pieces on trailer and drive home.
6. Toss pieces off trailer.
7. Stack small pieces.
7b. Split large pieces and stack(requires more touches depending on size of log).
8. Remove from stack and put on cart.
9. Remove from cart and stack in cellar stairs.
10. Remove from cellar stairs and load in stove.

Good grief that seems inefficient. :mur:

:)

I tend to cut up tree where it lands, and load into PT bucket. Skips the dragging step. Also, unloading PT requires no touches, just dump into pickup truck. If I am close enough to the splitter, I can bring the wood all the way with the PT. Of course I have the 1460 though, and it will hold almost 1/4 cord of wood in the LMB.

Time to upgrade Moss...:D:thumbsup:

The great thing about the PT is that I can get it anywhere in the woods that I am cutting. No way could a normal tractor get to some of these places.
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac
  • Thread Starter
#142  
I tend to cut up tree where it lands, and load into PT bucket. Skips the dragging step. Also, unloading PT requires no touches, just dump into pickup truck. If I am close enough to the splitter, I can bring the wood all the way with the PT. Of course I have the 1460 though, and it will hold almost 1/4 cord of wood in the LMB.

Time to upgrade Moss...:D:thumbsup:

The great thing about the PT is that I can get it anywhere in the woods that I am cutting. No way could a normal tractor get to some of these places.

My firewood is 9 miles from my house. I had to drag trees out of the woods to make room for a road to get my trailer in there. At the time, if I cut it into firewood lengths and hauled it out of the woods in the PT bucket and loaded my trailer with wood, I could not bring the PT home. If I have the PT on the trailer, I cannot bring much wood home. Catch 22 kind of situation.

So, I drug tree after tree out of the woods to my landing where I could then go back with my empty trailer and cut it into firewood lengths as time permitted.

Now that the area has fewer trees, I can back my trailer right up to the felled trees, cut them to firewood length and be on my way. No need to take the PT out with me.

If we are ever fortunate enough to be able to afford to build a new house out there, then by all means, I will use the PT to haul it directly to the splitter and skip the trailer step. :)
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac #143  
Hey it's all good Moss. Just bustin your chops. No doubt every move you make is well thought out.

Firewood gathering is very time consuming. I estimate it takes on average about 6 hours per cord to cut, deliver split, and, stack. Then of course there is a seasoning period, then the pile needs to be moved once again to where it will be burned.

It seems so much easier to buy oil that was drilled somewhere in the middle east, then tankered half way around the world to the US, then refined, and then tankered again to an oil service, and then tankered again to my house, lol.
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac #144  
One advantage of an outside wood boiler - you split and stack the wood where you burn it.

Ken
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac
  • Thread Starter
#145  
One advantage of an outside wood boiler - you split and stack the wood where you burn it.

Ken

That's a good point. I didn't want to invest in one in our current house, hence, the freestanding wood stove in the basement. But I will definitely consider one if we ever build new. The only thing I don't like is going outside to stoke it in really, really bad weather. With the indoor stove I can keep two weeks of wood indoors and never have to leave my cave during hibernation! :laughing:
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac
  • Thread Starter
#146  
Hey it's all good Moss. Just bustin your chops. No doubt every move you make is well thought out.

Firewood gathering is very time consuming. I estimate it takes on average about 6 hours per cord to cut, deliver split, and, stack. Then of course there is a seasoning period, then the pile needs to be moved once again to where it will be burned.

It seems so much easier to buy oil that was drilled somewhere in the middle east, then tankered half way around the world to the US, then refined, and then tankered again to an oil service, and then tankered again to my house, lol.

If I move well and don't mess around it takes me about 4 hours to drop enough trees for the entire year (6 cords), then about an hour per cord to cut into firewood size pieces, so another 6 hours. (10) Then another 6 hours to load it (16). Then another probably 2 hours to split and stack each cord so 12 (28).... plus driving time, repairs, etc... let's say 32 hours and that makes 4 full days of work this year to heat my home. Then it takes me about 3/4 hour every two weeks to haul in wood to the basement.... 6 months of wood burning, so 12 trips to the wood pile so another 9 hours on top of the 32 for 41 hours or about a week out of my life. :laughing:

If I worked for $10.00 an hour at, say, 40 hours, I could make $400.00 (before taxes). I saved about $800.00 in natural gas last year by burning wood. So I came out ahead a few hundred bucks. The advantages, don't seem much monetarily, as I make more than $10.00 an hour. However, I get a bunch of exercise, I enjoy being outdoors, I enjoy running a chainsaw, I enjoy running a tractor, I enjoy vigorous work in snow on a sunny day at -20, I enjoy the heat of the stove, the smell of the wood and the feeling of working for warmth. Call me kooky! :laughing: :confused2: :thumbsup:
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac #147  
David,

Sounds like you are getting the most out of your situation. Carry on my friend and enjoy.
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac
  • Thread Starter
#148  
David,

Sounds like you are getting the most out of your situation. Carry on my friend and enjoy.

Now I just need to find some time to go fishing and finish up that backhoe! :laughing:
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac #149  
However, I get a bunch of exercise, I enjoy being outdoors, I enjoy running a chainsaw, I enjoy running a tractor, I enjoy vigorous work in snow on a sunny day at -20, I enjoy the heat of the stove, the smell of the wood and the feeling of working for warmth. Call me kooky! :laughing: :confused2: :thumbsup:

I couldn't agree more. I do it just because I like it, not to save money. I spend too much buying new equipment for it to save me anything at all... lol!

Most of my friends and coworkers buy fancy cars, and boats. Not me. I buy Power Tracs, and Deere's, and Dolmar Chainsaws, and wood splitters, etc.....

Now who is the kook?
 
   / Firewood Gathering With A Power Trac
  • Thread Starter
#150  
We have had several discussions regarding the pros and cons of having a log splitter attachment for the PT. I have always maintained that I want as few engines as possible to maintain, therefore, as many PT attachments as possible. A log splitter attachment seemed a natural.

This is my third year heating with wood. The last two years I have had 12" and under locust to deal with. I split right next to my holz hausen wood pile, so there is no need to have the PT free to transport wood. I am currently using my father-in-law's stand alone 20ton splitter with 5hp motor. It is old, solid and works really, really well. :thumbsup:

However, a few weeks ago someone gave me two maple trees. I'm talking big monster maple trees. Well over 36" in diameter, because my 18" saw won't cut through them. We had to quarter the 16" thick rounds. Some quarters weighed over 200 pounds. I got over 120 pieces of firewood from one of the rounds! :shocked:I absolutely had to use the forks on the PT to move them onto the splitter. I just could not lift them. And since they were quartered, they had flat sides on four of the six sides, so I could not roll them all that easy, either.

So, I have made a few decisions...

First, I will NEVER take another "free" monster tree. It just takes too much time and energy to gather, haul, unload, move, split, and stack those huge rounds. I split about half as much wood as I did when using 12" locust in the same amount of time. Much of the time is wasted just moving those huge pieces of wood around.

Second, I will probably stick with the stand alone splitter until it dies. At that point, if it is the engine, I will probably re-power it with a cheap gas engine. If it is the hydraulics, I will probably convert it to PT powered and then commit to small wood only. Just stuff I can lift by hand.
 

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