trail clearing technique and tools

   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,542  
I'm finally working on clearing the last trail of all the blow overs, only the width of the trail not all the trees themselves.

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Next is this section. I was embarrassed that I had to lead my mushroom gathering friends through/over this blockage but it was easier than crawling through the dense Laural on either side.

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   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,543  
Wow, you have your work cut out for you!
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,544  
I do but I've made good progress, airbiscuit.

The wind shear, or mini tornado, occurred early Easter morning and blew or broke well over 100 large trees on the property. I was awakened by intense wind that lasted maybe 5 minutes. It was so loud I couldn't hear the trees snapping or blowing over. I only saw some of what happened the next morning when I looked out the window.

I walked out the driveway crawling over a couple uprooted cherry trees to the little gravel road and while to the right there were only branches and limbs, the road to the left was blocked. I own both sides of the road so I felt it was my responsibility to try to open it so neighbors from that way could get out.

This is the road after I worked on it for a couple hours barely making a dent.
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A neighbor family from the other end, not directly affected, showed up asking if they could help. There were 6 of them and they went right to work, he with his saw and his wife and children pulling the cut limbs off to the side. I divided my time between sawing and using the grapple to move the trunks.

After a few more hours we at least got the road cleared wide enough for a car.

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I've been working on the trails on and off ever since. All were covered in limbs, most had large trees down as well. The ones leaning over against another tree are the ones that always concern me getting down.

Most that fell across and near the road were a stand of red pine but all the rest are deciduous, mostly cherry, oak, and maple.

I already have more firewood than I have covered places to put it, including stacks of 6-8' logs, so I'm just leaving all the downed trees to nature.

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   / trail clearing technique and tools
  • Thread Starter
#1,545  
I do but I've made good progress, airbiscuit.

The wind shear, or mini tornado, occurred early Easter morning and blew or broke well over 100 large trees on the property. I was awakened by intense wind that lasted maybe 5 minutes. It was so loud I couldn't hear the trees snapping or blowing over. I only saw some of what happened the next morning when I looked out the window.

I walked out the driveway crawling over a couple uprooted cherry trees to the little gravel road and while to the right there were only branches and limbs, the road to the left was blocked. I own both sides of the road so I felt it was my responsibility to try to open it so neighbors from that way could get out.

This is the road after I worked on it for a couple hours barely making a dent.
View attachment 4296952

A neighbor family from the other end, not directly affected, showed up asking if they could help. There were 6 of them and they went right to work, he with his saw and his wife and children pulling the cut limbs off to the side. I divided my time between sawing and using the grapple to move the trunks.

After a few more hours we at least got the road cleared wide enough for a car.

View attachment 4296954

I've been working on the trails on and off ever since. All were covered in limbs, most had large trees down as well. The ones leaning over against another tree are the ones that always concern me getting down.

Most that fell across and near the road were a stand of red pine but all the rest are deciduous, mostly cherry, oak, and maple.

I already have more firewood than I have covered places to put it, including stacks of 6-8' logs, so I'm just leaving all the downed trees to nature.

View attachment 4296955
View attachment 4296956
What size tractor you got Milo?
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,546  
It's a 3520 Arly. 2013 model with 37hp, around 3,000# bare weight, probably 4,200#+ with loader, grapple and ballast box.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,547  
We had one of those wind shears a few years back, I could see some of our trees bend almost in half.
We got lucky we only ended up with a small area in our back yard covered in tree parts.
Down the hill a bit, some of the telephone poles got snapped at various heights.
only a 20-30ft path down from our yard to the river.

Nice the neighbors are helping, that's a lot of cleanup.
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools
  • Thread Starter
#1,548  
It's a 3520 Arly. 2013 model with 37hp, around 3,000# bare weight, probably 4,200#+ with loader, grapple and ballast box.
Your loaders lift ability is about 1000lbs? If so, are you happy with that capacity?
 
   / trail clearing technique and tools #1,549  
Your loaders lift ability is about 1000lbs? If so, are you happy with that capacity?
Yes very happy with what it can lift. IMO any more than it has would be pretty much wasted as it would overwhelm the size and weight of this tractor. For example most mate a 66" bucket to the loader but I have a 72" and it can lift that bucket completely filled with stone, wet clay, etc. Or with the grapple as large a green oak log as the grapple can grab, 9-10 feet in length.

And the overall size is ideal for my use much of which is in the woods. It's a very maneuverable size, much wider and it wouldn't fit. This is an open area of straight trail with just small trees I could cut if needed but other sections are no wider and crooked through mature trees.
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I had a very similar sized 2018 Kubota L2501 prior to this and it worked just about as well, I was completely satisfied with it. The only reason I bought this one is I was pricing adding a backhoe to the 2501 when I found that a friend had two of these (3720 & 3520) and was looking to sell this 3520 which also had a backhoe and just 152 hours. It has 10 more hp at the PTO than the L2501 which runs the flail just a little easier through tall weeds.
 

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