Here’s an idea for you John..you have 3 chains..you need only 2, get yourself an old tire. Wrap one chain around what you’re going to pull, the other through the tire and hook on your hook. Take one end of the other chain, loop it through the tire and hook it together . You end up with the two chains through the tire, it acts like a very strong elastic. Give whatever your working on a good yank with your bucket low, and what you’re pulling should come right along. I did that to a guy that got his tractor stuck on a South Georgia dirt road and a 100’ chain, he came right out! It will ruin the tire, so don’t expect to use it again. Good luck, God bless my friend!🎚🙏🇲🇾🇲🇾🇲🇾
Back when we lived on the farm, which at it's best was only marginal ground for growing crops. We made it into four sectional pasture. I collected a bucket of black walnuts and put them down by the barn. Next spring I had a bucket full of black walnut sprouts. I planted them in rolls twenty foot apart. I planted over one hundred starts and today my son lives there and he has a dandy stand of tall trees that are almost two foot thick. I had intended on selling then at some time. In 1976 the Soil conservation agent estimated that the mother tree was worth $8,000 for the Veneer log trunk. I knew or suspected that was good stock for making more trees.
Great John enjoyed this one we had another long one got the chance to give you another thumbs up to where I’ll be looking forward to watching the rest of the logs come out do it safe and easy there’s no reason and getting hurt take time to think about it.
Great video John, that walnut tree sure didn't want to give up at all. I'm looking forward to the video of you pulling that huge tree out of there. Not sure how you're going to pull that one off. lol. Thanks for the video my friend, and will see you on the next one.
Hi John!!😀😀 Love the old 450 !! I've ran a lot of them over the years. I would take a Case 450 over a John Deer any day. They are much easier to operate and easier on the body when you have to run them all day. I'm sure that if you cut the section under the splintered piece. The root ball will definitely hold it up and the piece will just fall and rest on the bent hickory. Take care and work safe my friend!! Logger Al
I suppose this is too much to expect, stumps and roots yielding usable lumber, but are they at least good for firewood? This gets back to the idea of using everything on a pig except its squeal.
I never seen a pin root, when it would reach maturity I wouldn't want to see the wind topel it over, kind of glad I have nothing like that on my wood lands. WOW
@@fricknjeep : making a silly comment that if you need to lift the back of your front end loader off the ground, a chain and a nut tree do quite nicely.
That should make a lot of firewood. You stop and ponder on things like I do. Be safe. Old Arkie.
hi there thanks for stopping by john
Here’s an idea for you John..you have 3 chains..you need only 2, get yourself an old tire. Wrap one chain around what you’re going to pull, the other through the tire and hook on your hook. Take one end of the other chain, loop it through the tire and hook it together . You end up with the two chains through the tire, it acts like a very strong elastic. Give whatever your working on a good yank with your bucket low, and what you’re pulling should come right along. I did that to a guy that got his tractor stuck on a South Georgia dirt road and a 100’ chain, he came right out! It will ruin the tire, so don’t expect to use it again. Good luck, God bless my friend!🎚🙏🇲🇾🇲🇾🇲🇾
hi there thats a good idea . thanks john
you have all the cool toys
Back when we lived on the farm, which at it's best was only marginal ground for growing crops. We made it into four sectional pasture. I collected a bucket of black walnuts and put them down by the barn. Next spring I had a bucket full of black walnut sprouts. I planted them in rolls twenty foot apart. I planted over one hundred starts and today my son lives there and he has a dandy stand of tall trees that are almost two foot thick. I had intended on selling then at some time. In 1976 the Soil conservation agent estimated that the mother tree was worth $8,000 for the Veneer log trunk. I knew or suspected that was good stock for making more trees.
Great John enjoyed this one we had another long one got the chance to give you another thumbs up to where I’ll be looking forward to watching the rest of the logs come out do it safe and easy there’s no reason and getting hurt take time to think about it.
hi there i think i am going to use it to cut the top off that big tree . thanks for watching . john
Great video John, that walnut tree sure didn't want to give up at all. I'm looking forward to the video of you pulling that huge tree out of there. Not sure how you're going to pull that one off. lol. Thanks for the video my friend, and will see you on the next one.
hi there well i have come up with a plan. hope to give it a try today . thanks for being here john
Thanks for sharing blessings to you and your family ✝️ have a great day and stay safe
thanks for being here john
Man! I couldn't believe how much that walnut stretched and bent, like rubber. WOW!
hi there kind of like a hickory . thanks for stopping by john
Interesting video John. That dozer sure comes in handy.
hi there yes it sure has been . thanks for stopping by john
Thanks John, good video. I didn't know you had that dozer,.
hi there its been in some of the older videos check some out , thanks for stopping by john
Amazing!
hi there they both surprised me , john
It's amazing how that black walnut root hung on, John.
Bill
Hi John!!😀😀
Love the old 450 !!
I've ran a lot of them over the years. I would take a Case 450 over a John Deer any day. They are much easier to operate and easier on the body when you have to run them all day.
I'm sure that if you cut the section under the splintered piece. The root ball will definitely hold it up and the piece will just fall and rest on the bent hickory.
Take care and work safe my friend!!
Logger Al
hi there its getting tired that makes both of us . thanks for being here john
John next time try sticking the bucket teeth in the ground and the roll the bucket back as your pulling
hi there yes you are right . i forgot about that thanks john
👍👍
thanks john
I wouldn’t have guessed that little tree could put up that much fight. I’m guessing your Case dozer is pretty heavy. Thanks for sharing.
Ha Ha John nice raw footage! Tooth Bucket will always win! 🪵🚜👍🏼🇺🇸
hi there yep . thanks for stopping by john
I was surprised to see the struggle with the first stump and then I saw the tap root!
hi there kind of like a hickory tree . thanks for stopping by john
I suppose this is too much to expect, stumps and roots yielding usable lumber, but are they at least good for firewood? This gets back to the idea of using everything on a pig except its squeal.
hi there i will use it . thanks john
I was surprised to see how long those roots were on such a small tree stump.
I never seen a pin root, when it would reach maturity I wouldn't want to see the wind topel it over, kind of glad I have nothing like that on my wood lands. WOW
hi there nut trees have the roots , john
That's a root system yes sir
hi there with both of them, john
I’d love to run one of those
hi there if you do hope it has brakes . thanks for stopping by john
if you need to lube the back of the tread.
you found the ticket!
hi not quite sure what you mean john
@@fricknjeep :
making a silly comment that if you need to lift the back of your front end loader off the ground, a chain and a nut tree do quite nicely.
small trees don't need to be split. big plus
hi there you are right , thanks for stoping by john
what does it say on that metal tag on the stump?
hi there i keep track of all my tree take downs , its the year and the tree # . now i just y/t them to keep track . john