I am cutting a new road on my land, despite never-ending rain over the last two weeks.  Since I have to go back to work next week, I finally decided I would at least drop the trees while I have time off, and can get the tractor in to skid logs later, once things dry out.  
I felled a couple poplars, but most of the trees so far (did 12 today) are Loblolly pines.  These are the most stubborn trees I have dealt with in a while -- they are real tall and skinny.  They do not want to fell with a normal notch and back cut.  The ones that fall in the direction of the notch -- what I want -- need nibbling on the hinge with the saw, since the hinge seems to be a lot stronger than I normally see.  And then others sit back on the saw for no reason, so I need to use wedges and tie on a rope to persuade them to fall in the direction of the notch.  Makes for slow going when the trees don't want to follow the rules.
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I am using both my Kubota 
L3200, with Wallenstein 
chipper on the PTO, and my new Kubota RTV.  Hard to believe one person could need two vehicles, but they are both helping out -- I have my gear in the back of the RTV and am using it to pull a trailer to catch wood chips from the Wallenstein.  Having gear in the RTV leaves the tractor front bucket free to help out when needed.
I am bucking the pine into 16' logs.  Not sure what to do with it yet.  Am going to see how much I have at the end and decide if it's worth hauling them to the paper mill, otherwise I will stack them and keep around for projects with my Alaskan mill.  The skinny ones are 8" diameter, while the big ones are close to 12" diameter.