Falling pics 11/25/09

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Now I just need the time! Startin a clearcut today. Was supposed to be break up work but 40s and muck during the day don't fly with the landowners around here. I need it to get cold. Really nothin on the horizon either.
 
Now I just need the time! Startin a clearcut today. Was supposed to be break up work but 40s and muck during the day don't fly with the landowners around here. I need it to get cold. Really nothin on the horizon either.
You and me both this rain over here just won't give up I swear I need to invest in a row boat here soon.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G890A using Tapatalk
 
Ok pop quiz! On the oak pulled stump how did I do my back cut? I always like figuring out other people's stumps. Even old rotten ones I find in the woods.
It looks like you cut the far side off first, then pulled it towards u'r root supported holding wood to turn it right or hold it from going left
 
Above my pay grade!
Naw i was confusing in how i asked. I backbarred the back cut. Thats what i was looking for. I put the dutchman in first then brought it around to gun. Finished the face. Then put the saw in the kerf in the back and walked it towards the pull side. Putting the dutchman in as your first step can tell you some things about the tree even before you have the face out. Starting the back cut from the kerf i first created seems to give the best movement when i absolutely need it. If im not overly concerned i will start my back cut on the pull corner, work to the other side and then back to pull side to finish. This can sometimes lead to a mismatch in cuts which forms a shelf of wood that has to break and can effect the overall fluidity of movement. I also start my back cut from the dutchman kerf when i know i will need a wedge to get things moving. A clean, single kerf is ideal when wedging a dutchman to start the swing.
 
why? i have done that, although most of our timber is to brittle and will break off sooner. only the willow oak growing in lower ground will pull the stump down that far most times.
Maybe it is you that is brittle old man! The easier the tree chairs, the better she will pull.
 
hmm, gum has super long fibers, but not splitty, but will pull long ribbons out the stump and log. i guess it really just depends on the wood, but i can turn most timber at least some.
even if i am old n stiff lol.
Thats true. Basswood doesn't chair but will pull like mad. Aspen too. They will split, just not chair prone. I feel pretty old n stiff by the time i go to bed every night.
 
Back
Top