Post a pic of your woodhauler

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Very nice Case and welcome aboard. You must be out west or down south because where I'm at she'd be a pile of rust by now. I love to see that vintage still looking good.
I was thinking the same thing....a few Northeast Winters, and it would look a lot different
 
Camo dogs require bright collars...don't judge.:)

Osage - nothing wrong with that - My dog gets an orange collar and sometimes an orange vest during the winter because there are too many coyote haters around here and he has a striking resemblence to the song dog! take a look at my avitar :)
 

Attachments

  • 011.JPG
    011.JPG
    248.1 KB · Views: 468
  • Like
Reactions: Insomnivore
I use whatever I have handy. (and here is another dodge pic;)) By the way - the loader bucket full was from a single large round. And yes, I gotz the stuff to handle big wood.


100_1078.jpg100_1539sm.jpgalkfirewood2.jpgalkfirewood4.jpghackberry.JPGlogsplitter 007sm.jpg
 

Attachments

  • 100_1050SM.jpg
    100_1050SM.jpg
    65.9 KB · Views: 555
Camo dogs require bright collars...don't judge.:)

Osage - nothing wrong with that - My dog gets an orange collar and sometimes an orange vest during the winter because there are too many coyote haters around here and he has a striking resemblence to the song dog! take a look at my avitar :)

We had a dark 'yote near me last year that looked just like him. nice archery tackle ya got there.
 
Osage - that one is a Asbel era Bighorn - I have 2 of them with 4 sets of limbs and a dozen or more other longbows and curves hanging around here. More addictive than saws in my world.

For the record - do you cringe a little like I do when you see someone with stacks of osage cut and split for firewood? I have burned a little and it is some awesome heat but dang do I think about all the bows going up in smoke!!
 
  • Like
Reactions: WriteNoob
For the record - do you cringe a little like I do when you see someone with stacks of osage cut and split for firewood?

Not around these parts, you don't. Dang stuff grows like weeds and have virtually invaded most fence rows (the ones that are left).
 
Custom trailer and JD 420
 

Attachments

  • locust load.jpg
    locust load.jpg
    92.6 KB · Views: 476
Jags,

What year is that cab over? That is an old Jeep right?
 
FC-150 (Jeep). 1959.

Sweet. I can't believe Chrysler has not built a new Jeep since they stopped making the J-10, J-20 and J-30s.
 
Sweet. I can't believe Chrysler has not built a new Jeep since they stopped making the J-10, J-20 and J-30s.
Not sure I understand. Grand Cherokee, Safari, Compass, etc.
 
I get all my wood on the back of the farm about 1/2 mile back, so I don't need to haul on the road or use a truck anymore. But I do have several "tools" to help collect/move/haul the wood, some of which make it pretty dang fun at times!

Most of the running back and forth to the woods is in the Kawasaki Mule. I can haul saws and tools easily with it. I buck in the woods and haul the rounds up to the barn/processing area using the mule, sometimes with a trailer. The JD 755 loader I use for moving and loading bigger rounds to haul and occasionally for pulling a log out for better working access, etc. The Mule also works well for skidding logs out and about.

I use my lawn JD x740 lawn mower and a trailer to haul the splits into the garage for burning. the trailer is actually the frame from a 1963 Tradewinds pop up camper that my parents used to have! A load is about 1/3 or so of a face cord, and depending on the season and type of wood that will last us 1-2 weeks. We leave the tractor and trailer right in the attached garage and fill our wood bag right from it. very handy!

Took us a long while to get here, but man I really enjoy and appreciate being able to have these "tools". Over the years we have hauled wood in lawn carts, wheelbarrows, toboggans, and even Pinto station wagons! It's all good.

Attached are some pics...
 

Attachments

  • web Rounds, trailer, 755   2012.jpg
    web Rounds, trailer, 755 2012.jpg
    96.4 KB · Views: 506
  • web 755, oak logs 2011.jpg
    web 755, oak logs 2011.jpg
    210.8 KB · Views: 510
  • web Bin, mule, 755 in woods  1212.jpg
    web Bin, mule, 755 in woods 1212.jpg
    158.8 KB · Views: 530
  • web Loading rounds 755, mule  1212.jpg
    web Loading rounds 755, mule 1212.jpg
    137.9 KB · Views: 568
  • web Hauling wood in 20121.jpg
    web Hauling wood in 20121.jpg
    129.3 KB · Views: 971
  • web Trailer rebuild 2   2012.jpg
    web Trailer rebuild 2 2012.jpg
    71.5 KB · Views: 3,003

No. FC150. The 150 is a 4 cylinder and the 170 was a six cylinder and typically longer. The FC series went though a TON of versions (Narrow, wide, long, short, pto shaft, water trucks, fire trucks (mini ones)) and about any attachment that you could think of. I still have not found anybody that could identify what the rear attachment on mine would have been used for.
100_1540.jpg
 
I don't want to hijack this into a jeep thread, but just to show how tough they are and keep it wood related...a Jeep FC170 hauling logs:
FC-170 Hauling Trees.jpg

Go here to see many variations:
http://thefcconnection.com/fc_gallery.htm
 
I love that green trailer AJ. the last pic.

web-trailer-rebuild-2-2012-jpg.92464.jpg
 
We had another post like this a while back but here are my humble toys, again.....

Warm weather hauling toys....

2012-02-19_13-25-34_756.jpg 2012-02-19_13-26-58_159.jpg Firewood.jpg2012-06-02_10-58-54_408.jpg 2012-10-01_17-37-28_877.jpg 2012-10-27_11-09-36_124.jpg

And here's my snowy weather hauler......

2012-01-22_13-19-21_448.jpg 2013-02-03_15-55-58_84.jpg Sledandmule.jpg

And here's my old 18' cuddy cabin boat trailer turned log hauler....I use this old girl to haul the logs from the jobsite to the mill, and haul the boards from the mill back to the house. No, my toys are NOT very pretty. But yes, they all DO get the job done.....

2012-12-23_12-17-47_290.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO
I was thinking the same thing....a few Northeast Winters, and it would look a lot different

Yeah over here in eastern Washington (the desert side) we see some snow. Not like you guys do on the east cost. This year we got 1". A couple of years ago we got about 6". Nothing terrible.
 
I love that green trailer AJ. the last pic.

web-trailer-rebuild-2-2012-jpg.92464


Thanks. It was a 1963 Tradewinds pop up camper that my folks had and I just "repurposed" it over the summer. Torsion bar suspension and it's a great around the yard utlility trailer and final wood hauler.
 
Getting some "poles" from out back.Messin round 016.jpgMessin round 015.jpg
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO and smokinj
Nice F450. I'd like to upgrade my flatbed to something like that one day.
 
Nice F450. I'd like to upgrade my flatbed to something like that one day.
It's a good truck, rubber floor, AC diesel & 6sp. I got it from a contractor I know, it was his truck and had a "tool" body on it. $10k & 54k miles. I was happy. Built the bed and bought a dump hoist. I needed a truck with a stick for my GN trailer (after 4 count em 4 auto trannys in my 350) I run it on the property on heating oil, can't do that with the new ones.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ScotO