At 03:29 PM 1/17/98 -0400, you wrote:
>The local commercial outfit I sometimes work for uses large flat-bed trucks
>(1-1.5 ton?) for bringing in the crop.
>
>The beds on these trucks are about 5 feet off the ground, at least,
>requiring one person to stay up there and stack the supers onto the
>pallets. (As the day goes by the height of the truck bed seems to
>increase, as the supers get "heavier!")
>
>This is okay, if there is always an "extra" person available, besides those
>carrying supers from the hives. I think we get something like 250 mediums
>on one load. The stacks are rolled off into the honey house with a hand
>truck.
>
>Another local NY guy, with a smaller operation, tows a low trailer instead,
>behind a smaller truck. This way he can load the supers right onto the
>trailer, with a minumum of lifting upwards. (Plus the trailer can be
>detatched and left wherever.) I believe he wheels the stacks off with a
>hand-truck as well.
>
>Anyway, can anyone offer any other points in favor of a trailer, vs. a
>pickup or other bed-truck? Besides the slight complications in driving, I
>wonder if anyone has found this to be a better arrangement, at least on a
>sideliner-scale.
>
>My pickup has a permanently frozen tailgate, so I have fun lifting the
>supers over the sides. Fortunately it is a small truck (not full size
>pickup) so it isn't too bad.
>
>Best regards and thanks for any input,
>
>JG
>
>
Jerry J. Bromenshenk, Ph.D.
Director, DOE/EPSCoR & Montana Organization for Research in Energy
The University of Montana-Missoula
Missoula, MT 59812-1002
E-Mail: [log in to unmask]
Tel: 406-243-5648
Fax: 406-243-4184
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