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Help! I have to move a massive log up a hill

Started by wernerbrandes, May 14, 2022, 02:20:36 PM

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wernerbrandes

Bought an historic 1900 home a year ago about 50 miles west of Chicago. 2 acres total, maybe a quarter of which is wooded. Dozens of mature hardwoods around: black walnut, white oak and sugar maple, with tons of black locust (invasive) throughout. This past week we did some major work around the property, including felling some dead/dying mature trees that were too close to the house, a few that were threatening power lines, etc.

The back half of the property slopes down toward a river, maybe 200' of slope between the top and where the bottom levels out. It's a decent little bluff. There's a 40 foot section that is probably 30º or so, the rest of it more shallow. My challenge is, I now have a beautiful piece of white oak that I need to get UP the hill and onto a trailer to take to my local sawmill. Here's the log:



 

 

It is 13 feet long and about 44" at its widest. A really beautiful piece of wood. But now I've got to get it up a hill and have no idea what would make the most sense. Do I rent a winch in a bag and slowly pull it up the hill using smaller logs underneath as rollers? Do I rent a skid steer for a day with a fork attachment? Do I back a trailer down the hill with an F150 or something (would still need to move the log obviously). My neighbor has a John Deere 1 series loader but I don't think it can handle something like this.

I've been looking for someone with a portable mill, no dice. I'm new to this — what would you do? The clock is ticking :)

nativewolf

Well there are a few portable sawyers not all that far away.  The issue is most won't be able to handle the log.  

What are you going to do with it?  Sell it?  Saw it for your own use?  

Going to be a very heavy log.  If you have a friend with a decent truck and a good equipment trailer (the sort that can haul a skid steer), you could parbuckle the log onto the trailer with a winch.  Basically winching it over the side of the trailer.  

Perhaps the easiest without local farmer is a rollback tow truck with a winch and some rollers.  Dig under it, put a few boards for a base, put a little jack, jack it up.  Install a second jack the same way but a bit higher up, jack it up some more and get a couple of rollers under it.  Have enough room to get a chain around it, winch it up the back of a rollback truck.  Logs going to be heavy, if you see the icons/ads on the left here and scroll all the way down there is an icon of a little red toolbox, click on that ...it is our toolbox and you will find a weight estimator.  

Good luck, sounds like a nice homesite.

Liking Walnut

Oddman


Don P

This wasn't that big, only about 3' at the butt, but we needed the entire 60' stick up the hill in one piece on a relatively level roadbed to set up the chainsaw mill.  We strapped the loader to a tree to secure the winch, ran through a snatchblock about center of the tree, wrapped it and came back across the road and secured the cable to a strap around a large tree. Hit the winch and parbuckled it right up the hill.





If you have a trailer there alongside with ramps to get the log up over the wheels it'll climb right up and drop in the bed.

metalspinner

I do what the little voices in my wife's head tell me to do.

metalspinner

I do what the little voices in my wife's head tell me to do.

red

Honor the Fallen Thank the Living

beenthere

I ask, "why is it cut 13' long" ??

A reason, or just happened? 

A good length for sawing and for lumber, IMO is 8'6". 

Easier to move the log, easier to stack the lumber for drying, and covers most uses for the lumber. 
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

metalspinner

Or you can forgo moving the log at all if you can find a Peterson or Lucas mill operator locally. Assuming you want lumber. 
I do what the little voices in my wife's head tell me to do.

wernerbrandes

Thanks to everyone who's replied so far. I'm (obviously?) newer to this forum and to working with lumber. We all have to start somewhere!

Quote from: metalspinner on May 14, 2022, 07:50:43 PM
Or you can forgo moving the log at all if you can find a Peterson or Lucas mill operator locally. Assuming you want lumber.
This. This is what I was thinking. I searched the Wood-Mizer directory and came up empty. My local lumber mill doesn't do mobile services. Nothing doing around the Chicagoland area but I never heard of Peterson so I'll check those out. Was hoping maybe I'd find a friend on the forum with a portable mill ;)...

Quote from: Don P on May 14, 2022, 06:16:20 PM
This wasn't that big, only about 3' at the butt, but we needed the entire 60' stick up the hill in one piece on a relatively level roadbed to set up the chainsaw mill.  We strapped the loader to a tree to secure the winch, ran through a snatchblock about center of the tree, wrapped it and came back across the road and secured the cable to a strap around a large tree. Hit the winch and parbuckled it right up the hill.

If you have a trailer there alongside with ramps to get the log up over the wheels it'll climb right up and drop in the bed.
Thanks Don P ... I'm wondering, if I don't have a loader with a winch, I can either rent or buy a winch and just lash it to a tree ... right?

Quote from: beenthere on May 14, 2022, 07:48:19 PM
I ask, "why is it cut 13' long" ??

A reason, or just happened?

A good length for sawing and for lumber, IMO is 8'6".

Easier to move the log, easier to stack the lumber for drying, and covers most uses for the lumber.
Good question. I can definitely cut it shorter, the tree service that did our work will be back and I can have them cut it down to 8'6". The story with this particular white oak is that the entire upper part of the tree including canopy was missing — it was just a lone trunk sticking up about 20' and starting to decay at the top where (presumably) it had broken off. There are several white oaks on our property that are north of 200 years old.

Quote from: metalspinner on May 14, 2022, 07:20:33 PM
^^^^ What Don P said



WDH

Black locust is a native species, not invasive.
Woodmizer LT40HDD35, John Deere 2155, Kubota M5-111, Kubota L2501, Nyle L53 Dehumidification Kiln, and a passion for all things with leafs, twigs, and bark.  hamsleyhardwood.com

chet

Quote from: Don P on May 14, 2022, 06:16:20 PM

If you have a trailer there alongside with ramps to get the log up over the wheels it'll climb right up and drop in the bed.
If the logs are very heavy, lay a couple 6x6's across the trailer bed so the log doesn't have so far to drop and to distribute the shock across the bed when it hits.  I say this as the proud owner of a rebuilt trailer deck.  :D
I am a true TREE HUGGER, if I didnt I would fall out!  chet the RETIRED arborist

wernerbrandes

Quote from: WDH on May 15, 2022, 08:38:42 AM
Black locust is a native species, not invasive.
Huh ... well I guess maybe it's considered invasive in this particular area. I had our IDNR District Forester out on the property and he said as much. It is literally everywhere.

Don P

Its a native invasive and a useful one.
 
What Chet said, makes it easier to unload as well, they will probably have forks.

All you need is to be able to pull a cable. I've slooowly loaded big stuff with nothing but chains and a pair of come-alongs.

Actually as I looked at that picture above again... that wasn't a true parbuckle. I simply wrapped cable and lagged the end to the log, then pulled on the cable "unrolling" the log. If there's a big bump the log can spin without moving so a true parbuckle pulling a loop of cable is more secure. 

Sit there and think the problem and especially think of where you will be so you don't get hurt if things go sideways, and in a single line parbuckle the log can go sideways. Cables and chains can break, that winch blew its seals a year or two later... never trust the equipment, it'll fail. Point being, you are entering the world of being a bug, don't get smushed. I got greedy early on and had a Dodge pickup to pull a large white pine log up the driveway to the mill. 3 u joints later we arrived 4' shorter  :D

dougtrr2

If it is down a slope, you may not find a portable sawmill willing to go down that slope either.  Setup could be problematic.

Trimming it to a shorter length is probably the way to go.  What does the other end look like?  The end you show looks like it could have some rot starting.  I would trim off that end until I got good wood and then select the clearest portion for my shorter final piece.  

Probably wouldn't hurt to paint the ends once you get it to length.  If you drag it up the hill the sawyer would probable appreciate you removing the bark.  The less dirt you get embedded the happier the sawyer will be.  It might save you on blade changes if he ruins blades in the process.

I had a large walnut log to move up a pretty steep hill. I considered several options using my forestry winch and what I now know is parbuckling.  I didn't have a good feeling about it so I was able to strike a deal with  a neighbor with a skid steer and grapple.  It was just barely within in his capability.  It got pretty light on the rear wheels it a few places.  

Good luck, keep up posted.

Doug in SW IA

thecfarm

I did it once with a big white pine, it was down a hill. We just could not get it to the trail to get the 3pt winch on it. 
I put the chain down low and we rolled it up the hill. Slow, oh yea, but it worked. Good thing the way out was level and almost all down hill. 
Model 6020-20hp Manual Thomas bandsaw,TC40A 4wd 40 hp New Holland tractor, 450 Norse Winch, Heatmor 400 OWB,YCC 1978-79

kantuckid

The log appears to be lying on a spot that's flatter than anywhere in sight on my place? ;D or my county, or even in my end of KY? :D 

Seriously, it does look pretty flat other than a slight incline down to the railroad track cut. 

A trailer rental will be lots cheaper than paying a tree service, that's for certain! 

Before you move or chop up the log, develop a plan for where and how you'll use it and dry it. 
Is the river large enough to float it, or shallow enough to allow moving it with a farm tractor in the river channel to a loading point? I suspect there's some seriously large tractors near the property. When I lived in KS nobody owned a log skidder in the area but plenty of dozers and large tractors. 
Having remaining large trees near the log makes for useful pull points.
Chains that break-I got several of those. Even a heavy duty hand winch like a Red Devil will break a cable. I borrowed my FIL and his oil field Red Devil winch to move a BIG rock from our (water source) spring and the broken cable slammed into his butt! With the cheapo winches the tool itself breaks. Cast alu teeth break easily, I'll never buy or use another one of those! 

 
Kan=Kansas;tuck=Kentucky;kid=what I'm not

47sawdust

Go to the nearest RR crossing ,drive down the tracks,parbuckle the log onto a trailer,go down to the next crossing and go home.
Sorry,that RR track looks to promising.
Mick
1997 WM Lt30 1999 WM twin blade edger Kubota L3750 Tajfun winchGood Health Work is my hobby.

beenthere

47
My thoughts too.. 
or maybe rigging up a small trolley to fit the tracks, and do a midnight rendezvous; loading and escaping down the tracks. 
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

47sawdust

beenthere,

Good thing we are not neighbors ! :D
Mick
1997 WM Lt30 1999 WM twin blade edger Kubota L3750 Tajfun winchGood Health Work is my hobby.

chet

And here comes da Choo Choo on its midnight run. Yup, I hear dat train a comin'    :D :D :D
I am a true TREE HUGGER, if I didnt I would fall out!  chet the RETIRED arborist

beenthere

.... it comin roun' da bend, I hear da wheels a movin, and rumblin thru de land.  

Get on board, .   :D :D ;D
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

Dakota

Oh for the want of a Lucas or a Peterson.  It would be so easy to set up on that log right where it sets, and haul out the boards.
Dave Rinker

wernerbrandes

Thanks again for all the advice, everyone. I was looking at that Peterson All Terrain Sawmill ... man that would be perfect for this situation!

What about quarter sawing this beastly tree? Our house has beautiful original (120 year old) quartersawn narrow-plank white oak flooring. If i cut this into 4 pieces itd be easier to carry uphill....

...but i'd have to split it.

Machinebuilder

I would not move it until you figure out what you are going to do with it.

I have a couple similar sized red oak logs along my field. They will probably lay there and rot over the next couple decades.
They are too heavy for me to move with the equipment I have, and too big for my sawmill.

There is a Lucas swing mill in the for sale section...................
Dave, Woodmizer LT15, Husqvarna 460 and Stihl 180, Bobcat 751, David Brown 770, New Holland TN60A

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