ericm979
Super Member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2016
- Messages
- 5,753
- Location
- Santa Cruz Mountains CA, Southern OR
- Tractor
- Branson 3725H Deere 5105
When I want to use the chips somewhere I've chipped into the back of my UTV, using a tarp over the roll cage as a backstop and to keep most of the chips out of the cab.
I got an ATV/UTV dump trailer from Woodland Mills which is what I chip into now. It does mean two trips or two people.
A few chippers have hitch receivers. Or if you can weld you can add one.
I use the chips on my dirt roads and in the chicken pen. Sometimes they go into the compost bins but we're usually ok there from other sources. Mostly I spray them out on the ground where I'm chipping to enrich the soil.
I leave the old rotting wood in the woods. If it's in the way I move it with the grapple otherwise it stays where it is. If it's rotting then it's on its way to becoming soil, and they're habitat for critters. From a fire safety standpoint rotting wood on the ground is not much of a risk.
Between air quality regs, lack of safe places to do it and a summer dry season that lasts 7 months it's not practical for me to burn. If you can safely and legally burn piles you might consider that. There's some stuff that I won't chip- old rotting wood and poison oak- which go on piles to rot. Obviously you would not want to burn things like poison oak.
Around here rental chippers cost a lot and it's an hour + to town and back when I pick up a rental. If you're renting you have time pressure to get your money's worth. With my own chipper I can do a hour's worth or whatever I need and then go back to cutting. OTOH rental trailer chippers can have more capacity. I've been able to chip material close to the chipper's 8" capacity but I have to throttle the feed way down and turn the feed on and off. With 50-something hp instead of my tractor's 37 you'll have less of an issue with that. Most people use material that large for firewood. Now that I have a decent stove I'm chipping less large stuff.
I got an ATV/UTV dump trailer from Woodland Mills which is what I chip into now. It does mean two trips or two people.
A few chippers have hitch receivers. Or if you can weld you can add one.
I use the chips on my dirt roads and in the chicken pen. Sometimes they go into the compost bins but we're usually ok there from other sources. Mostly I spray them out on the ground where I'm chipping to enrich the soil.
I leave the old rotting wood in the woods. If it's in the way I move it with the grapple otherwise it stays where it is. If it's rotting then it's on its way to becoming soil, and they're habitat for critters. From a fire safety standpoint rotting wood on the ground is not much of a risk.
Between air quality regs, lack of safe places to do it and a summer dry season that lasts 7 months it's not practical for me to burn. If you can safely and legally burn piles you might consider that. There's some stuff that I won't chip- old rotting wood and poison oak- which go on piles to rot. Obviously you would not want to burn things like poison oak.
Around here rental chippers cost a lot and it's an hour + to town and back when I pick up a rental. If you're renting you have time pressure to get your money's worth. With my own chipper I can do a hour's worth or whatever I need and then go back to cutting. OTOH rental trailer chippers can have more capacity. I've been able to chip material close to the chipper's 8" capacity but I have to throttle the feed way down and turn the feed on and off. With 50-something hp instead of my tractor's 37 you'll have less of an issue with that. Most people use material that large for firewood. Now that I have a decent stove I'm chipping less large stuff.