We had 7 inches of rain spread over almost 3 Days. I feel for all the Hurricane survivors, some getting 3 X that in one day.
I took the dogs for a walk on the trail around the property to clean up branches and check for washouts. The only washout is where I have trench filled with rip rap sized stone and larger across the road where there is a seasonal stream flowing. During the heavy rains it overflowed and washed out some of the trail.
I brought the
L39 don back with a load of gravel first moving some of the rip rap around, leveling and added the gravel.
Dark comes early now, and turning the tractor around I spied in the headlights a large rock maybe 15ft off the trail I never noticed before. It looked like a good "sitten" rock to place along side the trail to rest my bones and take in nature, so I started to did it out with the hoe.
It turned out to be much larger, like an iceberg. It did budge some with the hoe, and as I like a challenge so I go it out with a bit of effort.
I manged to get it to the side of the trail, It is tool large for a sitting rock being + 3' X near 4' x near 5 Ft. It would make a good landscape rock. Once out of the ground I could barley reach over it with the 10' hoe on the
L39.
The loader bucket struggled just to roll it over.
My calculating eyeball puts it at 4,500 to 5000, Lbs, no way The
L39 was not going to carry it.
It is going to stay where it is, until I have some other reason to walk my excavator down back, & I haul it out.
I will have to rest it on the front blade and pinch it with the thumb and bucket to carry it.
I wonder if my neighbor wants the rock? I'm curious if his SVL95-2 CTL could lift it if we used both machines to get it in his bucket. The rock would be tough to load, even in a skid steer bucket.
Edit,
Today I walked back on the trail and measured the rock.
A bit smaller than I thought. It was dark, That's my story, sticking to it.
Actual Measurement is +36"x +42" x 52" long, about 30 Cu. Ft. at 140Lbs/Ft^3 puts it at around 4,200 lbs. Granite weighs 170 lbs/ft^3, so maybe that is a 5,000 pounder?