Building an ATV Bridge From Downed Trees and Making Lumber Free-Hand with a Chainsaw. #39
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
I'm always looking for ways to get rid of odd size logs leftover from previously cut trees. This gave me the opportunity to do just that while also making my daily-driver trails more passable in the wettest seasons. Since the lumber I needed to make was only going to be driven on, I opted to half most of the logs free hand with the chainsaw rather than getting out the chainsaw mill.
I've now driven over the bridge a hundred times or more and neither the four wheeler nor I have yet busted through!
Because I’ve gotten so many questions about the gear that I use on the channel, here are some of the most important pieces I use every day:
My Favorite Piece of Gear- Chainsaw Helmet amzn.to/3uuW5xB
Granberg Chainsaw Mill amzn.to/3cdRXvn
How I Keep the Mosquitoes Away! amzn.to/3frenvh
Big, Black Log-Peeling Knife - Becker BK9 amzn.to/3oZIeOH
The Trailer I Use Behind My 4 Wheeler- Yutrax amzn.to/3fvO8DK
Bug Net Rooms I Use amzn.to/3uwOK0l
Heaters in My Tent and the Deer Castle amzn.to/3frQ7Jh
Thank you all so much for supporting this crazy endeavor! Without you folks donating to Surviving Ringworm, I wouldn't be able to even consider staying out here in the wilderness a second year making videos. You seriously blow my mind!
/ survivingringworm
(As a thank you for donating $5 or more a month through Patreon, I will carve your name into the picnic table and show it in an upcoming episode!)
If you don't want to donate monthly but still want to support the channel:
paypal.me/survivingringworm
Пікірлер: 224
Hey Ryan, my twin brother and I are buying some land in upstate NY and you played a large part in inspiring us to do so -- thanks for your amazing content. Truly have learned so much and has given me the confidence to move forward with this dream! :)
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
That's fantastic! Super excited for you. Now if you can just focus all your mental energy on making every minute and every day as fun as possible, it'll be a great experience. It's once you start getting serious about something that truly doesn't need to be taken seriously that things start to come unraveled. (There is next to nothing that needs to be taken seriously.) Have a blast!
@jakeriff95
3 жыл бұрын
@@survivingringworm2202 thanks Ryan!! Truly appreciate the advice - literally exactly what I needed to hear. It’s stressful getting ready for all this, but you’re right. Can’t take it too seriously and the most important thing is to have fun with it or what’s the point in the first place!!
@captainmikek8695
2 жыл бұрын
Cool man. I am buying land too in New York and have 80 foot pines I plan to take down and make some neat bridges for quads, walking, and snowmobiles... Just watching bridge building Ideas... I thought I would need a mill but now I realize I can snap a line, chain saw it, and call it good... Thanks man. but I have a pop-up, a 34 foot camper and a 42 foot camper. Plan on camping on my land this winter and doing manly things...
@jasongreen5439
Жыл бұрын
Where in upstate ny. I’m in the Adirondack park. Congratulations on your purchase.
It needs support, but not underneath. You need 'decking' on top that is perpendicular to the logs underneath so that it distributes the weight of your tires over all three logs on each side
Good stuff, Ryan. I'm building bridges and boardwalks through my swamp, so thanks for the inspiration.
Thanks Ryan. Very informative but also highly entertaining. Looking forward to the next episode. Stay safe👍🏻
Can't believe you can hear them chomping... I love your sense of humour.
Nice bridge. I with you on the heat . Thanks for sharing .
Hello to you the fine morning! Glad your dried out some.
Really like this channel. Something relaxing about watching this property be developed. Nice to see someone living their best life.
Always cool too see your progress
Was referred here from My Self Reliance viewers. I was not disappointed. Great video!
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
I've heard the name but haven't watched any of their videos. Looks like I am the last one on earth to the party! I'll have to check it out soon.
The bridge looks great. Great job
another awesome project and entertaining video. Thanks for sharing!
Your Bridge looks good aswell as doing a brilliant job... 👌
Nice bridge. Looks super solid to me.
Great videos. Really like the way you approach each project.
Hi always good to see you out with another video and today a new project . Have a good day.
Love your vids....looking forward to more building projects!
l Love watching a master at his craft, thank you
Nice job on the bridge. I’m about halfway through the list but you are on the right path kiddo.
such an agreeable character. i love this show
Of course the tractor started right up. It’s a Yanmar. I love mine
That's the coolest bridge!
Nice job. Nice mix of camera angles too.
Awesome bridge project
Love the bridge!
Thanks. Like your bridge.
I like this video..i may have pressed 2 unintended icons on your video by mistake when i got sleepy after a day's work..my apologies..this video is helpful for us. it will guide us in managing the big branches we pruned from a tree in our garden. Thanks for this awesome video.
Nice work on the bridge. Your channel looks to be right up my alley as for content. I'm subbed. Cheers
Job well done... Congrats!
Could you do a follow up and see how your bridge is holding up? This was the first video of yours that I viewed. And i must admit I've been hooked ever since! I hope the cabin is going good!
nice bridge and even if there is a failure plank you built it in such away it is easy to repair. good job!
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
Very true!
Just got an alaska mill. Those round sawhorses are dope!
That is 1 hell of a ATV Trailer, I like it
Dude your so awesome, I'm a michigander also!! I just bought a piece north of alpena to play on, keep up the great content!!!
Loved it! Great vid!
Cool channel! We built a fully enclosed 12' x 12' x 8' hunting cabin 16' up between 4 large oak trees in Upstate NY at 1400' Above Sea Level. It has 2 windows on each wall with a 3' wide walk around with shooting chairs.
The key to working outside in the heat (for me at least) is a huge hat and long sleeves. It’s counter intuitive but hiding from the sun outweighs the warmth of additional clothing, and let’s me work into triple digits. I like Duluth’s breathable synthetic shirts, hats with a neck covering flap, and Carhartt overalls. Obviously tons of water too. Awesome project, impressive chainsaw work, very inspiring!
Good looking bridge.
You doing a good job on your Bridge
Massive improvement from where you started! Can't wait to see when you get some flooding. I'm sure you'll make improvements if needed. Great job 👍
Perfect bridge ,,,, 80 deg is a nice day here in Queensland Aussie ,,
Not at all bad work worm. This bridge will hold. Until it one day breaks.. Fortunately, the lumber store is quite close. Thank`s a lot for sharing and we appreciate you too your videos are the perfect start to a fine Saturday.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
That's one of the few guarantees in this life: that that bridge will hold up until it doesn't. Glad you enjoyed the vid!
Well done
When I was younger My Office could get up to 46°C in Summer and I’d cope somehow. I’d also feel the Cold in Winter. Now I’m older and anything above 25°C and I’m absolutely wrecked. Now I don’t feel the Cold in Winter at all and absolutely love it.
I built a bridge once....but I got over It 😅
I enjoy that you talk to us in your videos. Know that we do respond! Lol.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
I've been listening!
I feel off when the temperature gets down to 60F. lol. That's too cool for my liking.
Thoroughly enjoyed this project. The ASMR is strong in this vid the gravel, chainsaw, lumber falling together, the 4 wheeler and wind combined, you could be onto something there. 😂 Looking forward to the man cave build.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
I am a pretty introverted guy and I guess I get most of my word allotment out on these videos. I might be even happier to leave out the talking all together and just go asmr tho!
not bad at all and using fallen timber not going to waste i like your way of thinking
good job
As the saying goes beauty is in the eye of the beholder. The bridge looks very nice and seems absolutely functionable. As to it needing to be stronger, the way you seem to build everything is beyond what is considered strong enough by the regular people. The ideas you come up with are what is needed to accomplish the goal you set. It is to bad that other things in our lives today are not as easy. Continue to have good health and happiness my friend.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
We do like to overcomplicate things don’t we! Wonder what the world would be like if everyone just make the stuff they needed with a chainsaw. If ya can’t carve it from a log, ya can’t have it. That’ll be the extent of the laws when I’m president.
@Downeastwaves
3 жыл бұрын
Love that word Functionable! Cabin Masters Ryan-a wicked Mainah uses it!
bonjour, personnellement je ne suis pas confrontée à ce genre de situation..mais vous assurez..good job..vous gérez très bien tous les jours...bravo!...belle vidéo
Great bridge build. Subscribed.:)
Good job
Nice bridge
Good tractor there. Can't beat a yanmar
good video. If you score it forward you can still see the line
Need to build a Flintstones car out of logs next 😁
Morning! I would of built a corduroy section. We did that at the hunting camp a few years ago. Worked really well!
@lindanwfirefighter4973
3 жыл бұрын
I did that also and it will last over a century. Here some of our side roads that were built as corduroy roads over a 100 years ago are still doing awesome. Build the corduroy and cover it with gravel to protect it from the air, weather, sun.
Nice bridge buddy ! Been following you for a while and I Appreciate your channel Greetings for quebec,canada !
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching Fred! You’d probably agree that doing work in the sun when it’s in the 80s is too hot, right?
You're such an inspiring dude! I envy the simple life...it pains me that all or most unoccupied land is somehow spoken for by government or sold off for anothers profit...I'm seriously considering just staking my own small claim somewhere deep in state or national park service land,here in new Hampshire there's 500+ acres literally right in my backyard...all I want is a small cabin,don't even want a driveway,road or electric...I just might..
Hey! Where's your five co-workers standing around leaning on their shovels or taking a smoke break like on public road projects? Oh yeah, this is another fine project brought to us fans by Ringworm! Thank you Ryan!
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
They were just off screen. Their union said I’d have to pay time and a half if they were in the video.
@Downeastwaves
3 жыл бұрын
@@survivingringworm2202 bahahaha! About right!
Who needs a woodmizer good job on making that lumber out of just a chainsaw. This is the first time I see your channel good job on the bridge 👍🇺🇸💯
Old school loggers used to corduroy (sp) logging roads..... some here in alaska have been around for 90 years or so and still passable..... lay the logs across the road.... 6 foot long should be plenty build a 6 ft wide road.... you can spread some gravel over top to smoothen the ride
80 degrees! LOL come on down to South Georgia in July and August! 97 degrees in the shade with a heat index of 107! We work outside starting at first light around 6:30AM and stop by Noon.
When we fixed roads in Adirondack mountain we put in small trees laid across the road side to side so any water would flow with trees and not wash out. I like the one you did might do same on trail I have in my woods
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
A very good thought. I'm absolutely going to do that- line the side of the trail with old logs just to make sure all the water crosses under the bridge and not out and down the trail. Thanks!
It gets over 100 here from July to early September and you get overheated within 30 minutes sitting outside, 3 minutes if you got a shovel in your hand.
Take a weed propane burner and char the logs contacting the ground they'll last for a very long time .
Hi from Australia, great build on the bridge. I would like to add a comment, make a bypass a long side of the bridge to use in dry weather and not have to go over the bridge all of the time.
If you plan to use this in the winter with ice and snow, fill in the center section. One slide sideways and you will be in trouble. Wouldn't take much more work. Chains on your ATV would help. If you had made it a bit wider , a log on top on both sides would keep you from sliding off. I would have used the tractor to shave off the downstream side to allow the ruts to drain. Either that or put in some culverts under your bridge using your cedar logs. I have 12 culverts, 3 causeways, and 3 bridges on my 80 acres. I also used large rock on two streams to form a solid bottom to cross. You use what you have. Get to know your local landfill operator and highway superintendent to save old CMP culverts, long steel beams, timbers, and other construction materials suitable for your trails. Bent culverts can be cut down. Better to save them from the landfill and reuse.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
I hadn't thought of sliding off in the winter. That certainly might happen! I'll consider filling it the rest of the way in. But I do have some pretty aggressive chains I put on the atv for plowing. It would be a pain to get that thing out if it fell through!
@SWAMPHUNTER644
3 жыл бұрын
@@survivingringworm2202 I have a 4 ft high bridge 60 foot long over a creek so going off the side would be bad. I put landscape timbers along the side. My bridge is wide at the middle and slightly wider than the ATV at the ends. I have stone ramps at each end. I made a mistake putting down the deck and not leaving space for ventilation. The deck rotted partly from wet leaves..
You need a water culvert, so water can run threw it. Rather than across your path > Your log holder gave me a ideal Fred Flintstone mobile. "Yabadabadoo" Use the round wood for wheels and the log down the middle with a set 7:37 now you know where i got the ideal from
i used the corduroy road method for my trails in the wash-out areas. Sand is difficult to find here so i used free wood chips from the electric company road workers. they gave me seven truck loads and i used all of it. when you build the road, you corduroy the entire wash-out then let mother nature push the water through. thats were you make the pass-over (bridge).
BossoftheSwamp used logs and sand. His worked out real good. It holds up pretty well and you have plenty of logs.
@Downeastwaves
3 жыл бұрын
Boss did an awesome job! Ryan too!
Ryan the gravel goes down to China !!! That is what Moma & Papa taught us girls!!! Missed you Ryan but had to go to bed again dreamt of the swinging bed I REALLY LIKE THAT am trying to make one for myself now!!!
Another great video. It is great to be able to say YES when you ask your questions. I had the pleasure of building two bridges when we were kids but they were concrete. The bridge turned out incredible. You keep throwing those hidden lessons in your video and I still like them. Don’t cut the sides off completely so that you can cut both sides easier, don’t peel the bark off a cedar if you don’t want it to slide off your saw horses, if a tree still elevated at one end you can get by with one saw horse, and finally your lesson, that you’ve done before is to run the blade between two boards so the fit together better. Another dumb question but I guess that you use a compost toilet in the woods, do you have a preference for wood shaving to use in it, obviously you have lots of shavings from you lumber cutting? Thanks again for sharing and have a great day!
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
Oh man. I didn't realize that all that info was in my video. I'm going to have to work even harder at dumbing these down. I don't want anyone to get the wrong idea of what these videos are for. I thought I was heading more towards "watch him get hit in the crotch with a rock" not calculus and civil engineering. No toiled here. I just go for a walk in the forest every morning with a cup of coffee and a shovel.
Subbed nice work
Nice job, don't forget to pay the toll...
That is an interesting project. Perhaps if the boards were put across the direction of the trail and not along and were supported underneath with full round logs at the direction of the trail the bridge would be even stronger and safer because the boards would be shorter that way and they would take the load of the vehicles for a shorter period of time. Also when a board breaks in this scenario the neighboring will support the wheel whereas now the wheel can fall through if it isn't fat enough. It would also had more grip on the inclines.
@fitz3540
3 жыл бұрын
Most bridges use both, with the visible boards being shorter and perpendicular to the ones underneath
I live in Michigan near White Cloud. Built a log bridge over a creek from 12’ red pine logs 2 years ago. Made a few mistakes but has held up well. So far. Have had almost zero rain here all spring. We have drought conditions.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
A few mistakes on a first bridge building is probably to be expected. Likely doesn't matter unless it is 20' up! I know I wouldn't drive on this thing if it was more than knee high...
I would have used the yammer to dig a cross section out of the road as if you were putting in a culvert the just bridge the gap!!
Couple cross members underneath for each section will gain a greater distribution of weight, therefore strength, but what you did was very impressive.
I enjoyed your bridge building video and was impressed by the quality of your results. Good work. It took a week but it was worth it. Stay well.
I'm from the Gladwin Mi. area and I have to say.... you're much braver than I to tackle a Northern Michigan winter in a tent. Good luck , I need to catch up with your story.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
Dead center of the state, right? I put numbers on all of the videos in case people new to the channel wanted to see the whole thing unfold chronologically. First video was right when my buddy and I first came out here. Nothing but trees then!
@HickabillyTim989
3 жыл бұрын
@@survivingringworm2202 right ...... middle of the lower peninsula
We put logs perpendicular on the wood roads, called corduroy roads in the old logging days. Allows water to cross the road under the logs.
I spent 2 weeks making a Corduroy Road on my driveway because I got sick and tired of the sloppy mess that it was year after year. My husband said it was a compete waste of time when I was building it. The driveway goes into my log cabin I am building and into where I harvest our fire wood. After it was made I could drive down it no matter how wet it was. My husband had to admit it worked out awesome and was well worth the time I spent on it.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
Nice work! I'd love to corduroy sections of the road but without any soil here, I think I'd loose my mind trying to level the things over the bedrock and boulders. Tell your husband to listen to you next time you come up with an idea!
With the cedar you have there a culvert may have been an easier water control system considering the land goes down on the one side.
New subscriber cheers
When I get on and off a quad all day long I usually just sit on one side
very nice. one thing is, when the vehicles are on the bridge, the tires seem to only be making contact with 1 log at a time... meaning with weight of the wehicles are not being spread out to all the logs. if you placed horizontal boards on top of the long logs, it would be solid as a the ground itself. just a thought.
You have to drink plenty of water and electrolytes to keep from getting dizzy! It's the fluid intake not the food that makes you dizzy unless you don't keep your vitamin intake balanced!
Watching Aussie Opal miners I saw a TRENCHER > A BIG chain-saw for EARTH !! - so watch out for fir-landers - SS-STTtt !!!!
Are you planning on placing a ground brace half way up on all sides to stabilize it ?
hey Ryan you know your fireash goes in those wholes in your road real good.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
You mean you fill the low spots with it? Didn't think of that. But I sure have a lot of it that I could use!
@fatherofpie5763
3 жыл бұрын
@@survivingringworm2202 yeah and during winter? fireash goes like cement in the snow, too,
great video! what size atv do you have? do you ever feel like you need more power? thanks
Gee's who needs an Alaskan chainsaw mill?
Got to say I am Jealous of that Trailer, Those Big fat rear wheels would probably be more than I need but they are cool
I thought those yellow/orange lady slippers looked familiar,we have pink lady slippers where I live in NH they're protected.
Funny, I live in NE FL and I'm fine in the summer heat but I can't handle our mild winters down here. 95° Temps with 80% humidity and I can work outside all day. But let the temperature drop down into the upper 30's and I'm stuck inside under a blanket all day. Guess it's what you get used to.
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
I didn't believe it was true, but you really do get used to a certain climate! I moved back to Michigan several years ago from California and I swear I was cold for two years straight. Now I work on stuff in the winter without gloves on!
Bury a sturdy pipe under the trail to drain the water.
When building anything for the first time I think of this saying... "professionals built the Titanic, and an amateur built the ark." I agree it's really satisfying to fill in a rut or a divot ;-) I had to fill in ruts left after a sprinkler system was put in and it was actually a fun thing to do strangely enough....lol What kind of snacks (in addition to crickets) do you like to eat to give you energy?
@survivingringworm2202
3 жыл бұрын
Man, those poor Titanic engineers are never going to live that down, are they? They build one crummy boat and it ruins their job prospects for centuries. I've really gotten into peanut butter something wicked. And yesterday I caught myself dipping a string cheese stick in jalapeno nacho cheese. Not sure I'd recommend that one to the average suburbanite, but it was fairly good.
@saltyshellback
3 жыл бұрын
@@survivingringworm2202 Hmmm...string cheese and jalapeño cheese dip sounds awesome! Have you had a Twinkie with a slim jim in it and Texas Pete hot sauce on top? So strangely good!
@saltyshellback
3 жыл бұрын
@@ConsiderFirstCnE I believe Ryan does have some divine inspiration 😉