we'll have to replace this post but how on earth can we get the cracked one out safely and quickly?

Yes it was a farce but the digging got things moving very quicklyGoggleboxUK wrote:They have what I call a 'concrete rootball' so if you've seen Kris' Dicksonia antarctica removal farce on video you'll know that a bit of digging round the foot of the posts will make life much easier.
After that just push, or pull, them over and turn through 90 degrees on the floor (like a clock hand going from 12 to 3, not rolling the post) and they'll be completely out.
If you have a large tree nearby you could hire a little winch to make life easier.
No offence intended Kris, I meant farce in a Benny Hill kind of way rather than being critical.Yorkshire Kris wrote:Yes it was a farce but the digging got things moving very quicklyGoggleboxUK wrote:They have what I call a 'concrete rootball' so if you've seen Kris' Dicksonia antarctica removal farce on video you'll know that a bit of digging round the foot of the posts will make life much easier.
After that just push, or pull, them over and turn through 90 degrees on the floor (like a clock hand going from 12 to 3, not rolling the post) and they'll be completely out.
If you have a large tree nearby you could hire a little winch to make life easier.
REALLY!! Moving quickly?!!! I must have watched a different video!Yorkshire Kris wrote:Yes it was a farce but the digging got things moving very quicklyGoggleboxUK wrote:They have what I call a 'concrete rootball' so if you've seen Kris' Dicksonia antarctica removal farce on video you'll know that a bit of digging round the foot of the posts will make life much easier.
After that just push, or pull, them over and turn through 90 degrees on the floor (like a clock hand going from 12 to 3, not rolling the post) and they'll be completely out.
If you have a large tree nearby you could hire a little winch to make life easier.
or a bad backSpringy wrote:We use a long handled tool called a post hole graft. It's like a thin scaffold pole with a small spade shaped end. The other tool is a post hole digger. We call them "spoons" as it looks like two spoons placed face to face. This tool is used to remove the soil that has been loosened by the graft.
I'd never dig a post hole or a large planting hole just using a normal spade, that is hard work!! Using the tools described above makes digging a post hole easy! ( unless you've got bedrock to go through)!