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Message
Removing old posts from the ground
Posted on 10/29/24 at 6:26 am
Posted on 10/29/24 at 6:26 am
What is the best way to remove old posts from the ground that have a good amount of concrete still on them? Some come out with ease. And some do not.
Cut to ground length and resod over? Is there another option that I should look at?
Cut to ground length and resod over? Is there another option that I should look at?
Posted on 10/29/24 at 6:28 am to Will Cover
There’s the tire method
You could also dig around them a little and jerk em out with a chain and a truck.
You could also dig around them a little and jerk em out with a chain and a truck.
Posted on 10/29/24 at 6:52 am to Will Cover
Without any equipment (tractor, skid steer, etc)
Farm jack and a chain
Farm jack and a chain
Posted on 10/29/24 at 6:59 am to Will Cover
quote:
What is the best way to remove old posts from the ground that have a good amount of concrete still on them? Some come out with ease. And some do not.
Depends entirely on if there’s anything near them that you don’t want to mess up.
If it’s the middle of a field I’d hook it up with a chain to a tractor or pickup.
If it’s next to your AC unit I’d dig around it then rock it back and forth until it broke loose.
I would bury it anywhere you plan to have grass because it can mess with things later on.
Posted on 10/29/24 at 7:31 am to Will Cover
If you can screw a little 2x4 piece to the post, you can usually do amazing work by prying them out. Similar to this. You might have to rock it back and forth, but you can work it up cheaply and fairly quickly. (wet ground sure makes it easier though)


Posted on 10/29/24 at 10:26 am to Will Cover
use a chain to to tie a 2x4x8 (4" side against the post) to the very bottom of the post.
put a cinder block on the under the 2x4 and the bas of the post and push down on the end of the 2x4. It will pop out
put a cinder block on the under the 2x4 and the bas of the post and push down on the end of the 2x4. It will pop out
Posted on 10/29/24 at 6:26 pm to Will Cover
I did this w/ a Hi Jack. Worked great


Posted on 10/29/24 at 9:24 pm to RaginCajunz
Can also try using a jack instead of the pry bar.
Posted on 10/29/24 at 9:27 pm to Saintsisit
quote:
I did this w/ a Hi Jack. Worked great
That’s a farm jack. I do the same for dead bushes too. I just borrow it from the neighbor.
Posted on 10/29/24 at 10:22 pm to Saintsisit
quote:
This is the way. Ive removed 100+ posts and couple dozen shrubs using farm jack.
TIP: A lot of wood posts rot at the ground line. The posts will often break off at the ground leaving nothing for chain to wrap around. For this, use a 8"+long lag bolt that fits through chain eye. Drill lag bolt down, using impact gun, into rotted wood embedded in the concrete. Usually that is enough to reach sound wood to pull out. You will still run into Excalibur every once in a while that will need a concrete buster.
WARNING: Pulling posts and old concrete leaves massive divots. Plan accordingly if you plan to backfill with dirt or replace with concrete. Just an example, I often found that if I pulled a post that had 1 bag concrete, it could take 3 bags to put a post back in the same spot. In this scenario I put gravel in bottom of hole/divot, set post, and backfill 1/2 hole/divot with gravel and rest with concrete. My point is that pulling and replacing in-kind doubles the concrete/gravel cost vs post hole/auger and 1ish bag concreting of new posts.
Posted on 10/31/24 at 7:40 pm to Will Cover
Either get an off road jack and use a chain around it. Soak the ground first.
I’ve used a cheap air hammer chisel from Harbor Freight to chip the concrete off in chunks to take it out quickly.
I’ve used a cheap air hammer chisel from Harbor Freight to chip the concrete off in chunks to take it out quickly.
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