Building a cabin road

   / Building a cabin road #51  
I made a 2nd 'driveway/trail for ATVs, that is narrow and fun. When it's hot & dry, having a 2nd way to get to the cabin keeps the ATVs from churning the driveway to dust. Also works for snowmobiles and the deer use it too.

378855d1402520412-stepped-off-almost-tipped-over-bench-trail16-jpg
 
   / Building a cabin road #52  
I made a 2nd 'driveway/trail for ATVs, that is narrow and fun. When it's hot & dry, having a 2nd way to get to the cabin keeps the ATVs from churning the driveway to dust. Also works for snowmobiles and the deer use it too.

378855d1402520412-stepped-off-almost-tipped-over-bench-trail16-jpg

You need to build a ramp over the hose!
 
   / Building a cabin road #53  
Sooooo, how is your progress?
 

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   / Building a cabin road #55  
I did a little research on that photo.

Oldest I found was 1995. It was claimed to be in Yemen, Eritrea, and Pakistan. :)

This is what it probably looked like in reality.

cliffroad.jpg

Bruce
 
   / Building a cabin road #56  
I did a little research on that photo.

Oldest I found was 1995. It was claimed to be in Yemen, Eritrea, and Pakistan. :)

This is what it probably looked like in reality.

View attachment 454352

Bruce

Alot more believable but still a pretty large pucker factor
 
   / Building a cabin road #57  
Any updates, or is the road building done for the year?
 
   / Building a cabin road #59  
Sounds like a good time to do some route finding. I find snow cover and dead foliage to be an advantage in route planning. You ignore smaller and mid-sized rocks as you should anyway. The topo relief stands out better. The number of trees to take down is more obvious. If you need snowshoes, the struggle will help you understand what the vehicles will see. Plus, I love being out in winter.
 
   / Building a cabin road #60  
I couldn't tell for sure from your pictures, but are the trees all/mostly softwoods? A problem I had with laying out a couple of my trails was being deceived by apparent maple saplings that turned out to be coppice wood from much larger stumps. It was easy to take down the sprouts (up to 4 or 5 inches in diameter), but the underlying stump was for a much, much larger tree...plus, there was then no leverage to push on it.
Softwood species like spruce, fir and pine don't usually coppice, so small trees have smaller stumps and root systems. Plus, they tend to be shallower-rooted than maple, birch and beech, so are easier to push over.
I like a multitude of trails so I can vary my walks (but I don't have a lake shore to distract me!).
Bob
 

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