The Stein Arbor Trolley looks sweet

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I ordered mine Sunday night. I'll send some pics of the usage. Can't wait!!

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Ours should be here tomorrow. I fully intend to be trolley'd around my yard before dinner.
 
Ok, so I have written and posted a lot about the Arbor Trolley, and I would like to share some specific thoughts after having it a while longer.

First let me offer some disclosure. Some of the products I review and produce video content for are provided to me at no cost. The Arbor Trolley is NOT one of these items. I purchased it at full price from TreeStuff (less 5% ARBORIST discount of course). I am in no way, nor have I been compensated by Stein or Reg.

When I first saw the AT I immediately liked the idea of it and decided I would 'make' my own. Well, the truth is I am not a fabricator nor did I ever have the time. A year + passed and I still hadnt 'made' one, so I bit the bullet and bought it. As anyone that has read this and the other threads knows, I immediately fell head over heels for it.

I am and always have been a gear junky, evidenced by the thousands of dollars I spend on random 'stuff' each year. I have bought tons of ropes, pulleys, rigging doodads, cords, tools etc. While many of them make my day to day a little easier, more convenient, or just a bit more stylish, nothing I ever bough compares to the AT. A new rope can be GREAT, a pulley can make my rigging so much BETTER or a little faster. Different things save bits of effort here and there, and there are lots of products that i just LOVE, but none has had measurable an impact like the AT.

When I started doing treework I was on a crew with a 6" chipper, an 80's chip truck and a either a $50 dolly from Harbor Freight or the cheapest wheelbarrow money could buy. Dont get me wrong, cut a 20" oak down in a back yard and wheelbarrow is revolutionary compared to carrying rounds out by hand. Where I work now we have 2 standard ballcarts which are obviously superior to a wheelbarrow or a Harbor Freight dolly. The AT eclipses all of those tools by a power of ten easily.

Nothing, in a similar realm of cost except maybe a chainsaw, offers the same return or has such an impact on production as the AT. After working with one, I literally CANNOT imagine working without it. At the end of the work day my body feels BETTER, because of the AT. Generating and removing tree debris is fundamental to what we do and just like I wouldn't cut a 18" log without a chainsaw, I wouldn't consider moving it without the Arbor Trolley.

There are plenty of jobs where we wouldntt take a traditional ballcart because it is a pain, its heavy, and its huge. The AT fits almost anywhere and goes EVERYWHERE.

I truly regret every day I have done tree work without the AT since first seeing it. It might not be for everyone, if you use a crane everyday maybe the AT isnt for you. BUT, if you regularly move logs or brush of any size without a machine, you are remiss by not having an AT.

The ArborTrolley does not disappoint!
 
Used mine today to move a small willow and cherry tree about 500 feet from a back yard to the street. I just cut up the branches and stacked them on the trolly, then put the heavy pieces on top. Worked like a charm I tell ya. Saved me at least 45 minutes of dragging.
 
I've been pruning mangroves on an estate all week. Yesterday the landscape maintenance crew came through to trim some palms and shrubs. I suggested that the petite lady who was handling the palm debris use the cart to run it the 100 yards to the street. The crew are now true believers!
 
We fit this entire small ash tree on the trolley and threw on some random brush as well. We were able to make it out from the back of the back yard in one trip while keeping the truck off the driveway per the clients request.

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Here is another ash tree a bit bigger, in the yard and the 'alley' between the houses. This is just the brush, as the log was left for another load.

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Taking brush out like this, if you remove the handle you can generally push it right into the feedwheels and the chipper will take it right off the trolley as long as you remove the upright staves.

And here is one with some longer lengths of logs. This load was easy to get out as I just drove it from the back of the long side and sent the short side out first.

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Here is a quick clip of the last load going out to the street

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5ebCeyMADw
 
Anyone in Canada own one of these? This is on the goodies list but the shipping will kill me. If you own one please let me know how you got it up here and who you bought it from.

Thanks.
 
Its about $90 to ship it to ontario through TreeStuff.com just give them a call and talk to Chad or Luke. One of them will hook you up.
 
Had a job last weekend in a courtyard at Carleton University. Had to take everything out through a construction zone through overhead scaffolding. Made up a hitch for the skid-steer and pulled it all out. Even loaded and dumped the cart using the grapple.

Trailer.jpg
 
I used mine to help a friend remove an old washing machine and bring in a new one. I installed two of the load stakes at the back end, and laid a 1'x2' sheet of plywood over them, to make a bigger base, and had no problems at all using it as an appliance dolly. It's ideally sized and will fit through most residential doors, I've found.
 

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