Hi,
I did not tie-down my new ice fishing hut and a couple of weeks ago on a very windy day it blew over on it's side. This was not a big deal as the exterior is sheet metal and it is on about 3 feet of lake ice. The problem was that on every sunny day it would sink deeper into the ice and it was too heavy for me to lift upright on my own (it is 6'x8' about 500lbs).
So last Monday I decided to get it back on it's ski's again. I put a burning Coleman stove in the hut to try and melt the ice under it, this had little effect as the hut is insulated with styrofoam. I chipped all around the hut with an ice chisel then chopped a 1foot deep by 3 feet long trough in the ice next to the lower rear wall (the strongest part of the structure).
Then the real portable power came into use, I slid a Hi-Lift Jack (we call them Jackalls up here) under the hut wall and 3 cranks later the hut was broken free from the ice! To see what I am talking about, a High-Lift Jack can be seen here
http://www.hi-lift.com/products/jacks.htmI then cut similar troughs on both sides of the hut at the roofline and jacked the structure up until the roof was about 3 feet off the ice, it was now on about a 30* angle. I may have been able to push it upright by hand but this was risky as the jacks would fall out as soon as I started to lift. So I attached 2 ropes to the upper ski ends and then to my 4x4 Toyota Truck and very slowly pulled the hut upright.
Success, and the only damage to the new hut was where I nicked it a couple times with the ice chisel or axe.
On the drive home I got thinking about all the times I had used the High-Lift Jack to get me out of trouble in the bush. I cannot remember how often it has got me unstuck in my vehicle, but I have also jacked small buildings with it and even used it to move boulders and pull fence posts. It not only lifts but it also pulls and compresses things.
Here is a handy trip that an old timer taught me when I was new on the job, that has save my butt a couple times. When you get a flat tire in the bush and you cannot get the lug nuts off because they are seized on, use the hollow handle of the Jack-All as a cheater bar to get more leverage on the wrench. Be careful, I once twisted the head off a lug wrench doing this.
I have a Jackall in both my personal and work truck and a third one in the garage for jobs around the house, I have found them to be very useful, durable, portable power and inexpensive insurance at about $90.00.
Does anyone else also appreciate this tool?
Mike
Standard Disclamer: I have no interest in the High-Lift Jack company but I sure owe the inventor a beer if I ever do meet him.