camptramp
Senior Member
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2013
- Messages
- 6,302
- Location
- The warm land on Vancuver Island
- Occupation
- Retired Logger Retired Part time pebble hauler
100% real, i have a bunch photos of these rigs. This is how they haul in Northern AlbertaSkadill, that second picture of the self loader looks fake, is that really the bunks?
Out west of Prince George Carrier Lumber hauled tree length by the time they got to the mill yard the ends looked like a pencil from dragging on the ground.
I would think the driver would have two options . #1 hang grapples down along side the load , get down and string wrappers out along road and hang chains in grapple . Get back up on loader and drag wrappers over load , then get back on ground and "walk" wrappers along load to where they can be tightened up . #2 Use a length of "sash cord" with a heavy nut in one end to throw over load . Then tie to wrapper and drag over load .Weyerhaeuser Snoqualmie tried tree length in the mid '70s. The dust cloud behind them was atrocious. You could not follow any closer than half a mile in the summer for the dust cloud. They quit after about 10 months. The sort yard just could not handle logs 100+ feet.
What is astounding to me is the fact that those loads are on a self loader. To build a load like that without seeing what you are doing when it gets that high is a real skill. And then to toss wrappers over the load without help from a shovel takes arms like a gorilla.
I would think the driver would have two options . #1 hang grapples down along side the load , get down and string wrappers out along road and hang chains in grapple . Get back up on loader and drag wrappers over load , then get back on ground and "walk" wrappers along load to where they can be tightened up . #2 Use a length of "sash cord" with a heavy nut in one end to throw over load . Then tie to wrapper and drag over load .
I totally agree with you . With 15-16 ft. bunks and 8 ft. stakes peaked up , it would take a good man to get a wrapper over the load , I used the loader to do the work . 14 ft. bunks and 6 ft. stakes peaked up I could do it . If you can get the chain over the peak , you could flip it and get it to fall down opposite side . A flat load like those Northern Alberta loads , It would be quite a feat .I would agree. Still though, it takes a lot of work to wrap a load like that. As a second loader, and a steering wheel holder, I had to toss wrappers over off highway loads and tricks like you mention either were not thought of in those days or just ignored as not being "manly." In my age, not being "manly" is something I'm not ashamed of. Any help I can/could get, I will take. Sometimes, not all the time, age does equal wisdom.