Apologies, it's the second time I'm making a fool of myself with a wrong translation. I will never mock Emmanuel Macron's English again. In french a "moteur thermique" is one that works with gas and I didn't think translating thermique to thermal would make it sound like some warm jacuzzi in a wheel barrow.Curious! Thermal generally refers to heat in English. So what you have is a motorized (which DOES produce heat
Thanks! I'm guessing from Google both motorized or track borrow would do.It's called a Track Barrow.
Mud ? What is this?They tend not to perform as well as one might think on slopes.
What they are great for is moving wet concrete on very muddy ground. If you've every tried to wheelbarrow an ordinary wheelbarrow full of concrete in ankle deep mud you would appreciate one of these.
It depends on the model. Ours does great on slopes, it's small, slow, not very powerful but very tractable (and almost 30 years old) whereas my stepfather's is bigger and faster but not as reliable on steep terrain.
It's extremely useful to us, not only to carry all kind of materials but also to bring small but heavy engines where we need them on the property like the wood chipper or the tiller ( hope I'm using the correct terms

In steep terrain it does need to be driven by someone strong enough to hold it back if it starts tumbling, which isn't my case.
Let me put this into context.Yup, even if there is food and good scotch.
It's not so much the having to work; it's having to take my boots off.![]()
The reason I have this rule is because my partner NEVER takes off his damn french army rangers in the house.
He would probably even wear them in bed, if he could.
Since I'm not sure if people outside France have the equivalent of this very french boot I will post this tax where you can zoom on his feet.