thank you and thank you for the video GSD Keegan. I do not have that kind of wood to cut anymore. this year I would like to put up 8 cords of firewood and approx 5000 bd ft of saw logs after that I will be cutting 4 cords of firewood a year. I agree a winch will be overkill the cost cannot be justified by the work I have to do. oni your log rack do you load it with the grapple. that would be interesting if you can load logs with a grapple and cut them into a trailer.3pt skidding / logging winch like a Hudson or farmi or something would help sort of…however they would drag the logs and you will still have the previous problem… I demoed a Hudson and it was awesome in terms of pulling power, however it drug the log until you get it to the plate to lift up…then it drags the butt, unless maybe you had an arch. I think a log arch might help but would not be able to drag the log if unable to reach it. I try to drop tree so that I can grab from side with forks or grapple and then place in the wagon(avoid dragging where possible). When space doesn’t allow that then I chunk It up where it falls and then Haul with loader / wagon or atv / trailer…I try to reduce dragging for reasons you mentioned. If cold and snow I drag to convenient location. I have a log rack that I can fill with logs and then make repeated cuts quickly…that in itself helps speed things up but that involves hauling all the logs to the rag. However with my B and snow on ground I am limited in weight / traction. Personally I would not invest in a logging winch for the B. I think it would be safer and more bang for the buck on a larger tractor….(if I only had the b and process as much wood as you mentioned, then I would have a winch for the B-logging winch is awesome. so far I have failed to gain any sort of commitment for my wife to work more to pay for a winch for MX. I do use a portable winch from my FJ to control dropping trees from time to time, but I do not use that to drag the trees as mentioned above. I think a second machine either way would be helpful?
 
				 
				
		 
 
		 . One for the B which is Artillian, which actually I think are best quality of weld of any implement I have ever seen. Very well designed and quality of weld…that being said the reason I bought them is for their flexibility of the hoe bucket and the front hitch. I’ve hardly used either extra capability and I was too cheap to buy the guard…doh…I have a dented hood and deformed cheap grill guard from OEM…doh.  The forks are great for the B and BX I had previously.   I use pallet forks more than I do the MMM.  Used weekly year round. With the MX (second property)I bought a real set from LP and they are awesome as well.  I can unload a full pallet of whatever with Mx and the fork frame has a step.  More useful than you would think. I love them.  For quality of engineering and weld integrity good luck beating artillian…for brute robustness I am happy with the LP.  Forks are most versatile implement for my situation and use I would never sell either.
. One for the B which is Artillian, which actually I think are best quality of weld of any implement I have ever seen. Very well designed and quality of weld…that being said the reason I bought them is for their flexibility of the hoe bucket and the front hitch. I’ve hardly used either extra capability and I was too cheap to buy the guard…doh…I have a dented hood and deformed cheap grill guard from OEM…doh.  The forks are great for the B and BX I had previously.   I use pallet forks more than I do the MMM.  Used weekly year round. With the MX (second property)I bought a real set from LP and they are awesome as well.  I can unload a full pallet of whatever with Mx and the fork frame has a step.  More useful than you would think. I love them.  For quality of engineering and weld integrity good luck beating artillian…for brute robustness I am happy with the LP.  Forks are most versatile implement for my situation and use I would never sell either. 
 
		 
				 
				 
				