trail clearing technique and tools

   / trail clearing technique and tools
  • Thread Starter
#1,381  
The owner of it got it used, a few years ago and never used it, now is selling the house and moving. If you wanted to take your side-by-side into the woods and grab a load of wood, seems like this setup would be ideal.

For the sake of trails, this would be nice to move downed trees out without bringing your tractor out to the work site. We are looking at used tractors so that lowers its value to us.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,382  
You might look into what they cost a few years ago and make an offer on that basis because he might not have as much invested as he is asking?
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,383  
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,384  
So wedging it over doesn't work for the trees in question?
Something like a 7-8" dbh hardwood, leaning into a clearing but still 40-50' tall is not a great candidate to use wedges on IME, with too small a stump, to cut and wedge with a fullsize bar. I was just clearing beside the phone line beside the road, so the tree had to go into the woods, so I had brought a ladder and a rope and my son to get a couple of those down. That jack would probably work for those type a bit faster and be a one man job.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,385  
I have one of these. I took the handle off, and hooked it up to my cordless drill. It works amazingly well. I have winched tractor attachments onto my trailer with it.


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   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,386  
So wedging it over doesn't work for the trees in question?

Something like a 7-8" dbh hardwood, leaning into a clearing but still 40-50' tall is not a great candidate to use wedges on IME, with too small a stump, to cut and wedge with a fullsize bar. I was just clearing beside the phone line beside the road, so the tree had to go into the woods, so I had brought a ladder and a rope and my son to get a couple of those down. That jack would probably work for those type a bit faster and be a one man job.
I feel I would have more control of the direction by exerting 2 ton 6 ft from the cut. Like IndyIan, if I need to, I can put a rope 30 ft up and yank it where ever I want.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,387  
I feel I would have more control of the direction by exerting 2 ton 6 ft from the cut. Like IndyIan, if I need to, I can put a rope 30 ft up and yank it where ever I want.
How do you get the rope 30' up, especially on say a 6-8" trunk?

One use case I can see with the jack is that it doesn't need an anchor.
With these smaller trees that make wedging difficult I usually use my rope come-along -- the stretch in the rope is a plus in this case because with decent tension on the rope, it continues to pull for just a bit longer than a wire cable, but you still need an anchor in the direction you're felling, and if there's no good tree that way, and you can't get a truck or tractor there... the jack could be useful.
Useful enough to pay for one? Not me, on this land, but I can imagine a place where it could be useful - especially if you're working on someone else's property and can't position a truck just anywhere.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,388  
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,389  
How do you get the rope 30' up, especially on say a 6-8" trunk?

One use case I can see with the jack is that it doesn't need an anchor.
With these smaller trees that make wedging difficult I usually use my rope come-along -- the stretch in the rope is a plus in this case because with decent tension on the rope, it continues to pull for just a bit longer than a wire cable, but you still need an anchor in the direction you're felling, and if there's no good tree that way, and you can't get a truck or tractor there... the jack could be useful.
Useful enough to pay for one? Not me, on this land, but I can imagine a place where it could be useful - especially if you're working on someone else's property and can't position a truck just anywhere.
I can either climb, toss a hook, or use a ladder. All worth the effort near a building or fence.

I do quite good dropping trees 95% of the time but a tree jack would just add another tool in the shed.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,390  
The owner of it got it used, a few years ago and never used it, now is selling the house and moving. If you wanted to take your side-by-side into the woods and grab a load of wood, seems like this setup would be ideal.

For the sake of trails, this would be nice to move downed trees out without bringing your tractor out to the work site. We are looking at used tractors so that lowers its value to us.
I'm not familiar with that brand. I use my own Metavic trailer pretty extensively. If the focus is on getting the logs out of the woods, they work wonders, but you need to be doing a fair amount of it (and/or find a used one at a good price) in order to justify the cost. If your use is just to move logs out of the way to clear trails, this type of trailer probably does not make a lot of sense. For that, I'd be looking at a grapple on a tractor

There are less expensive models on eBay. See this Link: ATV/Small Tractor Logging Trailer. You can also save eBAy fees by buying from the seller directly: Jason Zuleger at jasonzuleger@gmail.com. He imports them, and can have them delivered to a number of ports/warehouses throughout the US. NOTE: I've never seen one in person, so I'm not sure what the construction quality is like. I do know they come with "some assembly required".
 

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