The "Not So Pro" discussion thread...of course Pros are welcome!

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Its a full tail yes... but it is a smaller machine with 90hp not much room to work with, i can get my arms in if i lay on muh belly, but only one arm at a time cause the freckin doore is in the way... opens to the left and the cab on yer right side only leaves about a foot of ass space.

Later models the hood opens too the back much easier to work on, as it is you jave to dan e around the hood while holding it open just to check the oil
I'm lucky and also unlucky being the size I am, I'm always put in those small places.

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There is the root plates of the trees cut then a mat of tops and brush that you lay out under the wheels. Then you just make sure the forwarder doesn't load too heavy.
You know in a thousand years someone is going to dig that tree up and think its the beginnings of some ancient temple or something.
 
You know in a thousand years someone is going to dig that tree up and think its the beginnings of some ancient temple or something.

That's great, never thought of it that way. Maybe in a hundred years some greeny will find some of my old junk saw chains in their new virgin forest too.

There was reported to be trees close to a hundred feet underground when the company started stripping overburden for one of the iron mines here in the 60's.
 
Yeah I don't like that idea. That's how you get the "bogmen" they dig up every so often when cutting peat. I feel like you could lose a machine in the same way. Is it balsam? I see it still had green so not tamarack but I'm sure thats there too.
 
Yeah I don't like that idea. That's how you get the "bogmen" they dig up every so often when cutting peat. I feel like you could lose a machine in the same way. Is it balsam? I see it still had green so not tamarack but I'm sure thats there too.
Out here we wouldn't be allowed to touch stuff like that.

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Mostly black spruce, white cedar, tag alder brush and an occasional white birch. There were a few very nice balsam which is very unusual for this type of ground. They normally don't stray very far from rock.
 
Out here we wouldn't be allowed to touch stuff like that.

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There is no danger of runoff erosion, no rutting, no moving water or defined watercourse. Also the nearest pond is perhaps a half mile away. This would be considered timbered lowland, not wetlands.

What reason would you be kept away? Other than the little wood. This stuff is about 75 years old by the way.
 
There is no danger of runoff erosion, no rutting, no moving water or defined watercourse. Also the nearest pond is perhaps a half mile away. This would be considered timbered lowland, not wetlands.

What reason would you be kept away? Other than the little wood. This stuff is about 75 years old by the way.
I'd bet they'd consider that a wet land out here under oregon's description of a wet land.

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