Pulling out trees?

/ Pulling out trees? #1  

CA Grown

New member
Joined
Dec 17, 2012
Messages
10
Location
Central California
Tractor
John Deere 6520L
I'm wondering if there's a better way to pull out trees than wrapping a chain around them and yanking them out with a tractor.

Trees are various citrus, almond, walnut and grapes.

There's gotta be an easier way to get em out, right?
 
/ Pulling out trees? #2  
:)

HelicopterLoggingUSDA_t670.jpg
 
/ Pulling out trees? #3  
Sure the Chinook is nice but how many trees do you need to pull per hour to make it pencil out? :)
 
/ Pulling out trees? #4  
Best way..AC/Heat cab,no bee stings,triping or falling.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #6  
What part of taking them out by yanking on a chain don't you like?
Geting on and off and on and off the tractor?
Digging deep ruts when the wheels slip?
Maybe you need to rent a dozer or a mini-excavator for a day?
 
/ Pulling out trees? #7  
[Hook 'em high!

I was amazed at the difference wrapping the cable at 16' above ground versus say 10' or 12' has when pulling over a 60'+ trees. Get all the leverage you can! Found it handy to carry a bale hook up the ladder to use to reach around the tree trunk & grab the end of the cable. A small weight on a string tied to the end of the cable might also be usefull to "whip around" the trunk, so you can then pull the larger cable around the trunk with it.
A very long cable is better than a shorter one as it reduces the cable angle when you hook them high on the tree, that is, when you pull anything with a tractor where the load is above the plane of the connection point on the tractor, you're actually pulling the back of the tractor off the ground the more you pull, and you will lose traction. (versus a load below the connection point which makes the rear tires dig in that much more, which = wheelie instead of spin). Having weights (like your 6520) and 4WD will help, as well as a long cable that reduces the angle.

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/ Pulling out trees? #9  
I run my subsoiler around each side to shear any large roots then pull with larger diameter trees.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #10  
Here's an interesting technique I found on another thread.
"I used to pull smaller alder trees, not over but straight up. The biggest one was approx. 10" in diameter. I used a large round out of a log i'd cut up. I'd put the round on it's side right up against the tree, then hook a chain to the base of the tree as close to the ground as possible, up over the round then to my truck. The chain would pull tight then the tree would lift straight up and fall over. I did learn to top the tree after the first larger one i pulled fell over landed next to me"

If the soil is wet it helps too. When I pull trees, I'm sitting behind the protective cage of a 3 point hitch pulling winch, which makes me a lot bolder. Wouldn't want to catch a snapping cable in the head.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #11  
I can't tell if some of these answers are serious or tongue-in-cheek. I'm not sure I could recommend climbing 16' into a tree using a ladder to place a cable on a 60' tree so that I could pull it over. I can think of a lot that can go wrong with that technique.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #12  
I can't tell if some of these answers are serious or tongue-in-cheek. I'm not sure I could recommend climbing 16' into a tree using a ladder to place a cable on a 60' tree so that I could pull it over. I can think of a lot that can go wrong with that technique.

A year or two ago a guy near me had been using a cable or chain or both to pull trees. He was late coming in so someone went looking for him. The chain or whatever it was broke, whipped forward and hit him in the head. Lets just say he never made it home.
 
/ Pulling out trees?
  • Thread Starter
#13  
I can't tell if some of these answers are serious or tongue-in-cheek. I'm not sure I could recommend climbing 16' into a tree using a ladder to place a cable on a 60' tree so that I could pull it over. I can think of a lot that can go wrong with that technique.

lol, yep.

These are small trees (definitely not 60' high). Maybe a deep ripper on the back of a cat would be best.

So I guess now, what's the best way to get all the collateral damage out of the dirt (like loose roots, wood chunks, etc)?

The trees themselves will be easy to round up.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #14  
lol, yep.

These are small trees (definitely not 60' high). Maybe a deep ripper on the back of a cat would be best.

So I guess now, what's the best way to get all the collateral damage out of the dirt (like loose roots, wood chunks, etc)?

The trees themselves will be easy to round up.

For the cleanest neatest job a excavator with a thumb would be the way to go, bull dozers and track loader's just make a royal mess.

The excavator can pull em up like a carrot, if the ground is dry the roots will come out clean meaning not a lot of dirt stuck to them.

good luck--J
 
/ Pulling out trees? #15  
Here's an interesting technique I found on another thread.
"I used to pull smaller alder trees, not over but straight up.

This same technique can be used with a spare tire (mounted on a rim, of course) instead of a round from a tree.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #16  
I just use an old junkyard rim without the tire.

Works well.
 
/ Pulling out trees? #20  
Climbing a ladder 10' to put a cable at 16' really isn't a big deal, is it? Yes, there's definitely a danger of cable whip when pulling anything with a cable. In my case, I feel a bit safer having a cage on the 3 point hitch winch. Like the lever of Archimedes: "Give me a place to stand and I can move the world"
 

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