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- Apr 14, 2006
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I know I wasn't going to post any more skills threads, but I had a really nice day and I wanted to share.
Well I finally got to play in the woods today, after being sick for a couple of months, etc. While we had no real agenda, we came up with a few things to keep us amused. I don't know how many of you have seen Mors Kochanski's flip flop winch, but we had, but had never tried it out so, today was as good as any.
We didn't have any cars to move, but there was this one annoying log...............
You can see it was a fair size and frozen to the ground, to boot. I stuck my Bravo1 in the top as a size reference. Unlike most people, I took the picture after we had moved it, rather than before.
While none of us had tried this before, it was really quite simple, once we got the hang of it.
A closeup of the wound up rope.
Now we used levers shorter and thinner than Kochanski, but we wanted to get the feel of it and did. A very useful technique to know.
-----------------------------
Along this line, I remember reading about another technique, a long time ago, used for rolling barrels up ramps, using only a rope. It was called parbuckling. My Webster's College Dictionary defines parbuckle as:
parbuckle
/pahr"buk'euhl/, n., v., parbuckled, parbuckling.
n.
1. a tackle for raising or lowering a cask or similar object along an inclined plane or vertical surface.
2. a double sling made with a rope, as around a cask to be raised or lowered.
v.t.
3. to move with a parbuckle.
[1620-30; earlier parbunkel, of uncert. orig.]
So............ since we already had the rope out.................
In this picture, the left side of the log caught on a rock and allowed the log to turn, but no matter, we saw what we needed to - also a very useful technique to know. This technique was much faster than the Kochanski flip flop winch, but would only work on something that had a roundish form, that could roll, whereas the flip flop winch could also be used in other applications.
At this point, the troops noticed that they were doing all the work, while all I was doing was taking pictures, so before any real trouble broke out, I suggested we move along.
(continued)
Well I finally got to play in the woods today, after being sick for a couple of months, etc. While we had no real agenda, we came up with a few things to keep us amused. I don't know how many of you have seen Mors Kochanski's flip flop winch, but we had, but had never tried it out so, today was as good as any.
We didn't have any cars to move, but there was this one annoying log...............

You can see it was a fair size and frozen to the ground, to boot. I stuck my Bravo1 in the top as a size reference. Unlike most people, I took the picture after we had moved it, rather than before.

While none of us had tried this before, it was really quite simple, once we got the hang of it.



A closeup of the wound up rope.

Now we used levers shorter and thinner than Kochanski, but we wanted to get the feel of it and did. A very useful technique to know.
-----------------------------
Along this line, I remember reading about another technique, a long time ago, used for rolling barrels up ramps, using only a rope. It was called parbuckling. My Webster's College Dictionary defines parbuckle as:
parbuckle
/pahr"buk'euhl/, n., v., parbuckled, parbuckling.
n.
1. a tackle for raising or lowering a cask or similar object along an inclined plane or vertical surface.
2. a double sling made with a rope, as around a cask to be raised or lowered.
v.t.
3. to move with a parbuckle.
[1620-30; earlier parbunkel, of uncert. orig.]
So............ since we already had the rope out.................

In this picture, the left side of the log caught on a rock and allowed the log to turn, but no matter, we saw what we needed to - also a very useful technique to know. This technique was much faster than the Kochanski flip flop winch, but would only work on something that had a roundish form, that could roll, whereas the flip flop winch could also be used in other applications.
At this point, the troops noticed that they were doing all the work, while all I was doing was taking pictures, so before any real trouble broke out, I suggested we move along.

(continued)
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