We added another 40 or 50 feet to the hiking trail today. I remind myself (and others) that this project (?) is more about clearing cedar trees than creating a trail. Cedar trees are the crabgrass of the woods. They choke out almost all other trees. I quickly discovered I enjoyed cutting them with my trusty chainsaw, but getting rid of them hard work. As noted in previous posts, the wood chipper changed that. But I quickly generated big piles of wood chips and that was when the idea of making a hiking trail “paved” with cedar chips came to me.
My routine goes something like this:
- Use marking paint to flag the trees to cut
- Fire up (battery powered) the chainsaw and cut the marked trees
- Drag the trees/brush to a pile near the wood chipper
- Fire up the chipper
- Line the hiking trail with rocks to keep the chips from washing away. Works better than you’d think.
- Drag the chips to the end of the trail, dump and rake.
The rocks part is the most physically demanding. There’s no shortage of rocks on our property but there’s no easy way to get them to the trail. It usually comes down to picking them up one at a time and carrying them to the end of the trail.
I find all of this satisfying in a way I can’t describe. Mindless, physical activity out in the woods with no clear plan for where the trail leads.