origionalrebel
ArboristSite Operative
not burned, black stained from the bar and chain locked for most of the winter.:msp_wink:
:msp_ohmy:
not burned, black stained from the bar and chain locked for most of the winter.:msp_wink:
the really spooky part of this pic is the way the slab is still on the stump and where the stem ended up. would not have wanted to be the one cuttin from that side. also noticed the stump was burned by the bar binding.
i see it looks like the bar pinched ,the wind must have finished this tree off over the winter ,but what is the tiger doing with the nail on a string ?
split up 4 feet, top 3/4 =12+4=16Can't find any mention of a 16 foot tall oak in the original post.
A couple weeks ago our Pastor had a lesson and he mentioned a mans' thought process of "If you want it done right, do it yourself". As we left church I said "Steve, if you want it done right, call a professional." After 40 plus years in the tree business I've seen too many things go wrong by people thinking it was easy. I don't like bore cuts, don't use them, unless I'm carving an arm chair in a stump. I put a tag line on almost every thing, even leaners, and I do like big sharp saws that cut fast. I'd rather use my 100 cc 1050 with a 24" bar to drop an 18" Oak than my MS 290 with an 18" bar. People that cut an inch, walk around and look, cut another inch walk around and look, scare me. Safe is one thing, tentative is another. Once the cut is started it's pretty much too late to walk around and start thinking. I do it my way, others do it their way, both might work. I've still have all of my parts and no big scars, Joe.
I had a friend come out falling with me one day and I could tell he thought what I was doing was easy.
He tells me a fortnight later that he went home, whipped out his Poulan, and dropped a tree straight on the neighbour's fence. I just shook my head and after that I'm very wary about who comes out with me because sometimes what looks easy actually isn't. It only looks easy because I've done it 1000's of times.
The classic is reading all the falling manuals and having great theoretical knowledge yet still having no idea how to line cuts up or where your bar tip is pointing and cutting straight through the hinge. Or cutting under the lean, getting your saw pinched as the tree comes towards you, and worrying more about your saw etc etc etc. The list goes on and on.
I did have a nasty barberchair once though
3 pages and I still don't know where to get a good haircut :doubt:
what is the proper term for this "TECHNIQUE" of sawing the stem off the stump and using the face side bark for a hinge?
what is the proper term for this "TECHNIQUE" of sawing the stem off the stump and using the face side bark for a hinge?
Weed eating?
how things can go wrong. If I am showing them with the expectation that they may be using them I have them doing it with me standing there to make sure they understand.
I figured you were referring to him. Studied up on his "vertical snap cut" for tripping hung trees on youtube last year. Yeah, and I'm still in one piece. Only thing he might have mentioned in the video is if you make that cut on a tree hung up downhill, the trunk can swing downhill like a pendulum until it's standing straight up when it hits something and rebounds. Lucky for me, the spar stayed hung, but I was out of there in a hurry. That's how I remember Murphy4Trees.
Okay, when a tree gets stupid like this, How does one clean it up? I would assume not going after the strip of tree stuck to the trunk, that just looks like it will get interesting and dangerous very quickly. Is the best method to start limbing what is down until there is a controllable bit of the tree left?
way to get the job done, and NOT the way to advise a non expert.
how things can go wrong. If I am showing them with the expectation that they may be using them I have them doing it with me standing there to make sure they understand.
if it feels like there is pressure ,id just cut it down again ,put a face a foot below the old one and do a back cut so you have some holding wood to control it from popping , those short saws scare me falling anything ,i like longer bars keep my face away from popping stuff
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