Tractors and wood! Show your pics

   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,041  
^^^^^
It used to be good brook trout fishing up that way. I don’t know if that’s changed or not. My uncle had a hunting camp one town over on the Zircon Mountain* road years ago, until somebody broke in and burned it flat. They weren’t big trout, but we always had a good feed when we went up there.

*Now it’s called the Dickvale Road.

We actually fish Bryant Pond/Lake Christopher quite a bit in the spring. Never caught a trout in that pond, but we've had decent luck trolling for salmon. Not sure if you saw it, but early last summer there was a photo in the Sun Journal and BDN of a guy in a square stern canoe trolling on the pond. I'll see if I can find it.

Edit: Here's the photo:

SYGBgejh.jpg



Anyways, that was me! Funny story, it was a Thursday and to be honest I played hooky from work so I could go fishing, because it was just the perfect morning for it and I could not resist. As I was trolling up near the head of the pond, this Subaru stops on the road the runs around the pond and a person jumps out with a camera. Quite a few tourists around here in the summer now so I didn't think anything of it.

Friday morning, there's that photo of me fishing on the front page of the Sun Journal. "Man and His Dog Enjoy a Quiet Morning on Bryant Pond Thursday Morning". And that's how my sick-day cover was blown in the most hilarious way.

We also do quite a bit of trout fishing off the Dickvale Road, I would say it's still worth the trip. About the way you described, nothing huge, but it's a pretty reliable method of getting fresh trout for dinner. Shame about your uncle's camp. People suck.
 
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   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,042  
Ha, no kidding. I actually live in the Town of Woodstock, Maine, hence the name.

Kind of confusing, since you'll notice my location is different. The main road through town runs through "Bryant Pond Village", which is the hub of the town of Woodstock. Town office/garage is located there, library, ect.. The post office and mailing addresses are under "Bryant Pond," but taxes are paid to the "Town of Woodstock."
Yes, that happens a lot around here too, we have villages that are in larger towns, but no one knows the names of the towns, only the city or village names. And the same as you have there, the names usually aren't consistent.

I've also worked on projects where the house is within a certain towns limits, so you go to that building department, but the driveway will start in another town, so you have to get 2 sets of permits for the same project.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,043  
Friday morning, there's that photo of me fishing on the front page of the Sun Journal. "Man and His Dog Enjoy a Quiet Morning on Bryant Pond Thursday Morning". And that's how my sick-day cover was blown in the most hilarious way.
He's thinking, I just don't want to go to work, it's just too perfect of a day, besides, it's an empty lake, no one will see, how would my boss ever figure it out that I went fishing instead!!!

I was also wondering how you knew so much about the that Canoe from a photo!!!
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,044  
He's thinking, I just don't want to go to work, it's just too perfect of a day, besides, it's an empty lake, no one will see, how would my boss ever figure it out that I went fishing instead!!!

I was also wondering how you knew so much about the that Canoe from a photo!!!

Hahaha, exactly. Everyone was it good spirits about it, thankfully. There wasn't much going on that day anyways and pretty much everybody I work with is in to hunting/fishing, ect. so all I got for repercussions were sympathy and laughs.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,046  
Thank you, Skeans! That's good advice.

Not to toot my own horn, but I spent a couple years in my early 20's operating a JD 540B cable skidder for a commercial logging outfit. Loved the work, just ended leaving to pursue a better work opportunity. But regardless, I payed close attention to the knowledgeable old timers and learned lots of important tips and tricks of the trade, such as how to plan out a hillside cut exactly the way you've described.

Just waiting for the woods roads to dry out now so I can get in there and try it out. I most likely won't really put it work until next Nov./Dec., which is when I prefer to do my logging for the following season once the ground is frozen. I hate leaving ruts.
Frozen isn’t my choice for working on steep ground I’d rather do it in the early summer/late spring with a little moisture when you’re most likely to have good traction. Ruts really won’t hurt anything other then looking ugly I’d be thinking more about your own safety and when is the best time for traction so you’re less likely to pull yourself around as well. One thing I do sometimes on a thinning stand when hand falling to jumping the stump so the tree is less likely to get hung up or domino falling especially in the corridors.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,048  
If you think it will slide out of tree's it's wedged in, then at your house you might have a good anchor point (like another tree of good size) that a directional pulley could be attached to.

Then you should be able to pull in another direction.

I don't know if you were considering using cable or rope, but if it were me I'd be using 1/2" static rescue rope, a 4" diameter (minimum) pulley rated for the rope, and connection hardware that's also rated for the rope (all with a safety factor figured in).

I have these items available for me to use, others might have 5/16" or 3/8" cable.

KC
Have you ever used that Amsteel blue rope?
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,049  
Frozen isn’t my choice for working on steep ground I’d rather do it in the early summer/late spring with a little moisture when you’re most likely to have good traction. Ruts really won’t hurt anything other then looking ugly I’d be thinking more about your own safety and when is the best time for traction so you’re less likely to pull yourself around as well. One thing I do sometimes on a thinning stand when hand falling to jumping the stump so the tree is less likely to get hung up or domino falling especially in the corridors.
Frozen conditions is when much of the logging gets done here. A recent logging job on property I co-own required it in the contract (as suggested by our forester). Logging under anything other than frozen or dry summer conditions (assuming we actually have a dry summer) is a recipe for significant erosion problems here. Right now it's mud season, and most logging jobs have been shut down until things firm up a bit.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,050  
Hey 2 bit,

I have never used that "Amsteel Blue Rope", but it seems very interesting.

I have used, and still have some "Bluewater River Rescue Rope", and it's the only rope I have that floats except for some cheap lowgrade dockline for my fishing boat.

KC
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,051  
Frozen isn’t my choice for working on steep ground I’d rather do it in the early summer/late spring with a little moisture when you’re most likely to have good traction. Ruts really won’t hurt anything other then looking ugly I’d be thinking more about your own safety and when is the best time for traction so you’re less likely to pull yourself around as well. One thing I do sometimes on a thinning stand when hand falling to jumping the stump so the tree is less likely to get hung up or domino falling especially in the corridors.

We have a different climate here and different species so our trade offs on the best time to harvest are different. In general, here in the NE, late spring and early summer is a difficult time to do thinning or TSI work on many sites. Unlike your thick, tough barked Doug Fir our trees are going through there major annual growth spurt of the year and at that time and the bark is extremely tender. The new sap wood is wet, and soft and the bark is very vulnerable to damage. If you just touch the bark of a keep tree it gets rubbed off. So between that and the mud/ruts and soil compression caused from working on wet ground spring and into early summer is typically a poor time to be logging here.

gg
 
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   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,052  
Hey 2 bit,

I have never used that "Amsteel Blue Rope", but it seems very interesting.

I have used, and still have some "Bluewater River Rescue Rope", and it's the only rope I have that floats except for some cheap lowgrade dockline for my fishing boat.

KC

I don't know that I would be using Bluewater River Rescue Rope for skidding logs. It has too much elasticity for logging use, which can be quite dangerous if it breaks (more elasticity = more stored energy when under load. That energy is going somewhere if it breaks. The rope and anything still attached to it will take off like it was shot out of a cannon. Hopefully it's not directed at you.) It's also less abrasion resistant than the Amsteel Blue. Amsteel Blue is Is very inelastic and much stronger: Amsteel blue is made of Dyneema, which is claimed to be the strongest fiber known to man (significantly stronger than Kevlar).

Some stats for 1/2" rope:

1/2" Amsteel Blue1/2" Bluewater RR
breaking strength30,000+ lbs4,000 lbs
elasticity0.96% at 10,000 lbs9.1% at 1,000 lbs

Bluewater Rescue Rope is fantastic stuff for what it is designed for (water rescue) the fact that it floats is a major plus in that sort of work. It's just not designed for logging type applications. (BRR rope floats very high in the water, Amsteel Blue just barely floats - specific gravity is 0.98% - so it's almost the same weight as water.)
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,053  
We have a different climate here and different species so our trade offs on the best time to harvest are different. In general, here in the NE, late spring and early summer is a difficult time to do thinning or TSI work on many sites. Unlike your thick, tough barked Doug Fir our trees are going through there major annual growth spurt of the year and at that time and the bark is extremely tender. The new sap wood is wet, and soft and the bark is very vulnerable to damage. If you just touch the bark of a keep tree it gets rubbed off. So between that and the mud/ruts and soil compression caused from working on wet ground spring is typically a poor time to be logging here.

gg
Late spring to early summer is when our bark is slipping as well when thinning it’s possible to do it when the bark is slipping it just take a different attitude as well as planning. Like right now our bark is just starting to slip so I start cutting differently, when big bonus to cutting in the spring is you can see the growth. I’ve done hardwood thins before and most of the time I’ve done them in late spring early summer for these exact reasons.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,054  
I agree with all the reasons listed above for logging on frozen ground. The narrow R1's on my tractor really churn up and cut into the ground while trying to skid logs on thawed forest floor. It's not bad just travelling, but putting a load on and pulling with them causes enough slippage to dig deep ruts in the woods around here. Not necessarily an issue for a property that's being used exclusively as a wood lot, but I spend a lot of time walking and snowmobiling around my property and just don't want the ruts.

Additionally, I find that my tractor gets the best traction on bare, frozen ground. As I said before, the thawed, soft forest floor allows for some wheel spin and slippage. Adding chains to the equation only multiplies the destruction. However, once the ground freezes I put my studded aquiline chains on and the tractor will have so much traction that it will usually stall before it spins. Night and day difference compared to thawed ground.

And finally, I buck up my logs with a chainsaw, so I like how clean the logs stay while twitching in the winter compared to summer. The thawed topsoil around here really packs into the bark of heavy hardwood logs when they're skidded, and it makes for a lot of saw filing when it comes time to buck them up. The frozen soil doesn't pack into the bark so much, and if there's snow on the ground then the logs stay very clean and I can go a lot longer between saw filings.

Just my .02 cents.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,055  
Hey john Mc,

You are correct, I would not use any of my ropes for skidding logs, I only use my 3/8" chains for skidding logs.

About the static line (very low stretch) rescue rope that I do have, I was discussing how I'd use the rope to free up a small tree that is wedged into another tree.

And only if it looked like a little mechanical advantage would free the wedged tree.

KC
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,056  
This is how my wife does wood.
 

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   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,057  
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,058  
My buddy came over today to help with firewood, sure takes a lot of the work out of firewood, cutting over a wagon or trailer,

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Anyway, best part is, he brought his two boys with him, so it was pretty easy to put a board in place and roll these big boys onto my splitters beam,

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We ran some BIG oak through the 4-way,

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and we over filled three of my half cord boxes with splits,

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Not too bad for a few hours of work, and we didn't work steady either...

We have half of the downed oak cut/split/in boxes now, so next we need to go skid out the other half!

SR
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,059  
best part is, he brought his two boys with him,
That looks like a good day's work. Many hands make for light work... especially when some of those are powered by younger muscles! 👍
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #20,060  
This snatch block is a real time saver, here using to lift the log over rocks, self realeasing makes a bit difference.

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