The Winter Lift That Didn't Fail — Until the Load Shifted
Winter makes easy jobs harder, no matter what industry you're in. Mud, ice, gloves, low visibility, and rushed decisions create the perfect conditions for a lift that looks routine to turn unpredictable.
You've probably lived it: you're moving a pump skid, an implement, a tank, an IBC tote, or a piece of equipment that should be simple. The rigging is on, the load comes off the ground, and then it shifts. Nothing breaks. Nobody gets hurt. But everyone suddenly realizes that the lift wasn't as controlled as it felt. That moment is the reason winter lifting deserves its own set of habits.
Why winter turns normal lifts into sketchy ones.
Most winter lift problems don't come from dramatic failures. They come from small setup mistakes that winter amplifies. Uneven ground and awkward pick points change your angles. What was fine in the shop becomes a side-load situation outside, and the load starts to walk. Cold hands and time pressure make people skip the boring checks: pins not fully seated, hardware not aligned, hooks not oriented correctly. That's all it takes to introduce movement.
Winter exposure doesn't just look ugly. It steals time.
Corrosion and grime are how you end up with seized hardware when you need it most. A pin that should move suddenly doesn't, right when you're already behind. The best winter lifts are the ones nobody talks about afterward. The simple rule that gets you there: standardize your kit and inspect early, before weather makes everything harder.
When your rigging gear is consistent and inspected before the season ramps up, you're not improvising in the cold with half the parts you need. And when hardware is protected from corrosion (including corrosion-resistant and salt-coated options where it makes sense), things still move the way they should. Pins still move in March instead of turning into a fight.
Winter readiness is more than rigging.
One overlooked part of winter staging is the support gear that keeps the job moving. While staging lifts, many crews also stage air and water lines for cleanup, blow-off, and general work around equipment.
That's where a cold-weather air/water hose like YetiFlex fits naturally. It's one less thing to battle in winter. When hoses don't turn into rigid rods in the cold, the work stays smoother, especially when you're already fighting mud, ice, and limited daylight.
Start with a basic staging routine.
- Start on solid ground. Level and support the load before tensioning the hook. Frozen ground can look stable and still shift.
- Seat every connection. Fully insert pins, secure cotters, and check hook orientation before the lift. Don’t rely on a quick glance.
- Test the lift low. Raise the load a few inches and pause. If it drifts or twists, fix it before going higher.
- Swap stiff hardware early. If a shackle or pin is sticky now, it’ll be worse in the cold. Replace it before you’re rushed.
- Lay out support gear cleanly. Keep hoses, lines, and cords organized to prevent trips and frozen tangles.
We can help with training, equipment, and creating a tailored rigging and lifting plan specific to your industry and need. For safer and faster lifts, turn to the rigging pros at ARG.
The Winter Lift That Didn't Fail — Until the Load Shifted
Posted Tuesday Feb 10, 2026
