I know, I know, it't not a truck, but... I had noodled this Pin Oak a while back but never got it moved over to the pallet pile to be split. I hated seeing it laying on the ground so this evening after doing some cutting I got the tractor out and moved 4 loads of it. I'm not sure what those pieces weighed, but it was a bunch. The front of the tractor was pretty light hauling this over to the other area. Here's pix of a couple of the loads. This will probably get used in '22 / '23 season. I would never have gotten these up in the truck. I'll probably struggle to get a couple of them on the splitter.
Thanks, that's one of the reasons I took off like my tail was on fire when I seen it for sale...that, and it was rust free and priced right.
Here are a couple loads that were cut from my neighbors across the road from me. I wasn't sure how to get the wood out. I couldn't get an trailer in there. I couldn't get a tractor close to it. I decided to try to get my truck in there. I have a very tight turn to make and my truck has the turning radius of a school bus. After I make the right turn I have to back up a pretty steep hill going down a fence row that Me and my dad cleaned up so we could acess the wood. It is very tight, I have told fold my mirrors in. After I get up on the hill it levels off. I had to carry the wood to the truck or on the farther stuff I used a wagon. I had a carryall for the tractors I could have used, but rotted up. These pics are back at my place. Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Carryalls for a tractor are the bomb unless you have to get on the road for more than a 1/4 mile or so.
We cut some more firewood Saturday. I got 3 more truck loads. This time on the stuff that was far from the truck I used the BX and the pallet forks. Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk