The 'Less dense' woods I leave in larger splits.
Nice score for you! Amazing that so many people still reject pine!Pine is great...around here nobody wants it and will pay to have it hauled away. On Sunday I landed a $500 job of hauling about 6 cords of yellow pine from a guys property about 10 miles away. It's all on the ground, all the limbs are gone and about half of it is cut up in fireplace length. Nothing is bigger than 18" in diameter. So this guy is paying me to heat my house....yes, pine is great!
Awesome I'm gunna drop and drag out some stump seasoned pines in the morning, so quick burning stuff sound like just what I need to mix in with the elm that burns for 10 hours haha. Heres my sweet lawn skidder, shes dragged a 18" butt oak log 14' long log out of the fairly knarly trail I have out through my property. Got 42 pounds of ballast in each tire and about 85 pounds of weight rigged on the back. Plus my 210 and usually a saw, maybe 12 more pounds.
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Pine is great...around here nobody wants it and will pay to have it hauled away. On Sunday I landed a $500 job of hauling about 6 cords of yellow pine from a guys property about 10 miles away. It's all on the ground, all the limbs are gone and about half of it is cut up in fireplace length. Nothing is bigger than 18" in diameter. So this guy is paying me to heat my house....yes, pine is great!
Haha it makes noises sometimes but keeps going. I'm going to tear the transaxle apart soon and lock it and I have a buddy that has a set of chains for me I have to go pick up. Then it should pull how I want.Wow - your transmission must be more rugged than the one in my Deere 135.
Just think of what you could pull out of the woods with using an arch. And chains on the tires.
As long as you want it to go straight... locked rear ends and chains equals zero steering unless you add rib front tires and a bunch of weight on the front axleHaha it makes noises sometimes but keeps going. I'm going to tear the transaxle apart soon and lock it and I have a buddy that has a set of chains for me I have to go pick up. Then it should pull how I want.
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I am going to add 40-50 pounds to the front, and in the summer for mowing I'll take the weight off the back and leave the front so I can still turn when I'm mowing.As long as you want it to go straight... locked rear ends and chains equals zero steering unless you add rib front tires and a bunch of weight on the front axle
Nice score for you! Amazing that so many people still reject pine!
Haha it makes noises sometimes but keeps going. I'm going to tear the transaxle apart soon and lock it and I have a buddy that has a set of chains for me I have to go pick up. Then it should pull how I want.
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Have a giant cottonwood came down just can't make myself do all that work.I'll burn about anything. Here there is lots of Cotton Wood, that you can't give away. I had some big ones on my property that I had to drop and did burn. Too much ash, and I'm glad it is all gone.
If these are 18" diameter you need a new tape measure, or new glasses. More like 18cm...lolAwesome I'm gunna drop and drag out some stump seasoned pines in the morning, so quick burning stuff sound like just what I need to mix in with the elm that burns for 10 hours haha. Heres my sweet lawn skidder, shes dragged a 18" butt oak log 14' long log out of the fairly knarly trail I have out through my property. Got 42 pounds of ballast in each tire and about 85 pounds of weight rigged on the back. Plus my 210 and usually a saw, maybe 12 more pounds.
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Have a giant cottonwood came down just can't make myself do all that work.
Will probably just cut out what lays across an old trail through the slew.
Was used to access a potato cellar.
Trail goes back to horse powered farming and early tractors. I think the keystone is dated 1904 or 5.
Trail comes down hill from the field to the cellar. Then crosses the slew splits toward the house or loops around back to the field.
All makes sense with horses.
Have a giant cottonwood came down just can't make myself do all that work.
Will probably just cut out what lays across an old trail through the slew.
Was used to access a potato cellar.
Trail goes back to horse powered farming and early tractors. I think the keystone is dated 1904 or 5.
Trail comes down hill from the field to the cellar. Then crosses the slew splits toward the house or loops around back to the field.
All makes sense with horses.
I'll burn about anything. Here there is lots of Cotton Wood, that you can't give away. I had some big ones on my property that I had to drop and did burn. Too much ash, and I'm glad it is all gone.
I don't recall having all that much ash from the Cottonwood that we burned, are you leaving the bark on?