I'm afraid you'll end up looking like a fish out of water and wagging your tractor back and forth with oddly swinging pot stacks.

I gotta say jinman, that brings up a pretty good visual, might have to find someone with a video camera.
A local contractor has a bracket that he chains to his hoe bucket using a normal "bear-trap" chain tightener.
Not familiar with that type. How is it different from a truckers "boomer" or a racheting binder?
I'm unsure of the overall "workflow": boat approaches/beaches(?) and offloads 400 pots ...or is a boatload fewer than 400?...offloaded with jib crane? or, how? unloading a boatload takes how long? ...is that when they get stacked five high? I'm sure my mental picture is wrong, but just curious
I developed an allergy to what I call "real"boats quite a few years ago, now I just fish in open skiffs from a cabin on the beach. The one I use for crabbin is 30' and just an open skiff, I just put it sideways to the shoreline to load/unload it reaching in with the loader. If I don't do it at the top half of the tide then I have to travel 1/2 a mile one way so I need to do it relatively quickly. A full load is 75 pots and I only do that many on a nice weather day. I just reach over the rail with my forks and put off/on a stack that's y if I could just reach in with the bh(not long enough by itself) for another stack it would speed things up considerably but with a rapidly incoming tide loading/unloading stoneboats/trailers would take up a bit of time. About half of the time I am fishing alone and have to get off/on the tractor to put the hooks in each load.
I was mostly just worried that a 5' extension attached to the bucket with 500 lbs would stress the bh. With it on the bucket for transportation I would be able to lower the dipper with the bucket boom raised keeping the pots lower and not swinging as they would be resting against the bucket boom just like they do against the forks.
I appreciate all the input from you guys! Except for a few months in the summer there is noone else in the bays to bounce things off of don't know how I got by without a tractor or tbn:thumbsup:.
Rick