SeanKroll
Treehouser
IF you were climbing instead of felling, rathere than rigging a bunch of small pieces, a 4'x4' piece of plywood with brush on top will catch chunks. If you're going to piece it up on the ground into rounds, you might just drop single rounds, letting the groundie load them on/ in a rolling material mover as you land them keeps you both producing. Once you get some small log chunks, you can get rid of the brush to the chipper or whatever, and you have small logs to put on top of the plywood. Drop small pieces, quickly. The logs that are on the board will get beat up. You won't hear them complain.
A rope handle on the plywood will allow someone to pull it from a good distance, giving a good, flat rope-angle and not putting effort into lifting, just sliding.
Rigging a heavy leaner like that sounds like something I'd rather avoid with an armored pad.
Chunks will bounce off wood. You might need a ratchet strap to hold logs on the plywood. Rebuilding every time it would be silly.
Way faster than rigging, and way more of both people working more of the time.
Anyone can make it land on the drain field. If they have any concerns, piecing it out shows greater skill.
A leaner like that will likely be less than graceful to climb, so be forewarned.
A rope handle on the plywood will allow someone to pull it from a good distance, giving a good, flat rope-angle and not putting effort into lifting, just sliding.
Rigging a heavy leaner like that sounds like something I'd rather avoid with an armored pad.
Chunks will bounce off wood. You might need a ratchet strap to hold logs on the plywood. Rebuilding every time it would be silly.
Way faster than rigging, and way more of both people working more of the time.
Anyone can make it land on the drain field. If they have any concerns, piecing it out shows greater skill.
A leaner like that will likely be less than graceful to climb, so be forewarned.