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tramp bushler

tramp bushler

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Feb 3, 2007
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3,376
Location
Interior ,Alaska, Copper River Valley,, Coastal Al
Hey Glen!
How are things on your end? Fell any big timber lately?

I was actually using that husky 394, she's a real strong runner, you sold me a couple of years these past few days in some decent sized white pine...
Hey Glen! How are things on your end? Fell any big timber lately?

I was actually using that husky 394, she's a real strong runner, you sold me a couple of years these past few days in some decent sized white pine...

Alex ; I was thinking about you the other day, and wondered if that saw was still running. . Thats great. It made me good money, Sounds like its doing the same for you. . !!
 
madhatte

madhatte

It's The Water
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Moderator
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Apr 19, 2009
Messages
7,365
Location
Just south of Puget Sound
A few from last week's fire:

62c9b14ecf64b46c7d04c11849cdd95f.jpg


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5296db6f650e608925ef0ca12f6130c1.jpg


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This thing kept us busy for 4 days and still needs monitoring.
 
tramp bushler

tramp bushler

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Interior ,Alaska, Copper River Valley,, Coastal Al
Falling , on a fire is different than production falling . It has to be . When I production fall , I work for 6-7 hours. By and large , non stop saw in the cut , about as fast as I can go . . Big difference in 6-7 hour days and only being concerned with cutting timber . And 16 hour days where your primary goal is to not get cooked like a sausage on a camp fire.
 
BeatCJ
Joined
Nov 4, 2014
Messages
695
Location
SW Washington State
Hi Everyone !
Well , I gotta publicly eat humble pie here.
... I will say , that of the dozens of guys I saw running a power saw on this fire . I wouldnt of hired a single one of them . Well ok there were 2 that showed promise. but . I just couldnt watch any of them. . Ok so ya may be wondering about my humble pie eating . . What I did learn is , Those same guys KNEW !! how to keep me alive and safe !!!!! Yall understand the forest in a way I had never experienced. . Had to go hide in The Black and or make tracks to a Safety Zone several times .
I wouldn't worry about it. Many (most) hand crew sawyers couldn't cut it as a faller. I have a few buddies that have been on crews, and they always say the definition of sawyer is someone that doesn't like to dig. But all of the professional firefighters should be good at the fire behavior thing. I always enjoy working with contract fallers, never failed to learn something.
 
catbuster

catbuster

Roadbuilder Extraordinaire
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Nov 30, 2009
Messages
1,601
Location
Louisville
As short staffed as we are each year, we straight up couldn't fight fires where I work without dozers. Dozers are great.

Dozers are probably the best thing to happen to wildland firefighting since the concept of learning fire behavior. There aren't a lot of young guys who want to fight fire anymore. And, a lot of older guys are retiring, so the mechanization of using dozers isn't so bad.
 
Metals406

Metals406

Granfodder Runningsaw
Joined
Sep 18, 2007
Messages
10,126
Location
NW Montana
Even tho we had done a tremendous amount of work with the dozers, a hoe and 3 line crews . . the work looked GREAT . But the spots turned to slop and it got on the back side of the ridge we were on and got up into the piles I had pushedup.
That's the dance you do in a fire, lay too much wood down, it can be a spot for a slash pile from hell.

Don't cut enough, you can leave candles, hazards, etc.
 

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