falling axe wanted

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Gologit

Completely retired...life is good.
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I'm looking for an old west coast style falling axe. If you're from the redwood country you might have one of these gathering dust in the shop. A handle would be good but not absolutely necessary.
 
you talking a double bit axe? if so, I've got one of those with a handle, though it needs to be sharpened some, and have a few nicks worked out of the edges, but is in good shape.
 
A west coast style falling axe is double bitted but the bit [axe-head] is a lot longer from edge to edge than a traditional double bitted axe. I'm probably not explaining myself very well but anybody with gray hair, worn out calks, and who knows what a spring-board is will understand. They were used to chop the undercut in redwoods and usually had an extra long handle
 
I have a good idea what you're referring to, how long is the cutting edge, and handle?
 
They also had a bowed handle for when chopping in the apex of the notch, so as to not bust your knuckles.
 
Husky288XP said:
They also had a bowed handle for when chopping in the apex of the notch, so as to not bust your knuckles.

A bowed handle on a double bit ax?, yes we need some pics :p
 
well it seems I've been collecting these type axes for some time. Here's a 10in beauty!

axe.JPG
 
My grandfather was a foreman for TVA when they were clearing land for the lake system. I've got a couple of his old double-bit axes but I don't think they're particularly unique. These were probably just some hardware store axes he bought for his farm.

I do remember him saying that the axes they used with TVA were 5lb and when they were sharpened down to 3 1/2lbs they bundled them together and sank them in the center run of the river. Govt wouldn't let them keep them and it made him real mad since they'd still last a farmer many years at 3 1/2lb. Absolute waste of good tools.

He also said his men (he had a crew of about 100) tried the two man chainsaws but they were too much work - wore his men out. They used two man crosscut saws and the double-bit axes for all thier felling and used oxen to drag all the timber out.

His crew cut about a 1/2 mile swath and there was a sharpener wagon that just made its way back and forth along the line swapping out sharp axes and saws for the dull ones.

Also a film crew came out to film his men working. Grandad said there was never a time that there wasn't a tree falling somewhere along that 1/2 mile line. Wish I knew how to find that footage.

Many of his men came to my grandparents 50th anniversary back in the 80's.

He died in '93 and there is so much I'll never know.

Chaser
 
Curved long handled double-bit axes were used to fell redwood. The purpose was to keep from skinning your knuckles in a huge undercut. The axe handle was also used to hold the cross-cut saws up while setting it in the back cut. Sager, Collins, Kelly, and Plumb, are just a few that made Pacific Northwest falling axes.
 
wagonwheeler said:
My grandfather was a foreman for TVA when they were clearing land for the lake system. I've got a couple of his old double-bit axes but I don't think they're particularly unique. These were probably just some hardware store axes he bought for his farm.

I do remember him saying that the axes they used with TVA were 5lb and when they were sharpened down to 3 1/2lbs they bundled them together and sank them in the center run of the river. Govt wouldn't let them keep them and it made him real mad since they'd still last a farmer many years at 3 1/2lb. Absolute waste of good tools.

He also said his men (he had a crew of about 100) tried the two man chainsaws but they were too much work - wore his men out. They used two man crosscut saws and the double-bit axes for all thier felling and used oxen to drag all the timber out.

His crew cut about a 1/2 mile swath and there was a sharpener wagon that just made its way back and forth along the line swapping out sharp axes and saws for the dull ones.

Also a film crew came out to film his men working. Grandad said there was never a time that there wasn't a tree falling somewhere along that 1/2 mile line. Wish I knew how to find that footage.

Many of his men came to my grandparents 50th anniversary back in the 80's.

He died in '93 and there is so much I'll never know.

Chaser


Guys like that are a goldmine, if you can get them to talk! I'm still trying to pry info out of my father. Funny - he'll talk to strangers more than to family.
 
Dean,thanks for posting the pictures of your axes...those are the real deal. Now I don't suppose you'd want to sell one? Anyway...in your business you probably have more exposure to the kind of people who might want to part with one. I don't have a lot to spend but the axe would be taken very good care of.
 
My grandad loved to tell stories. I was fortunate to have spent many summers with him, but was young and always thinking about 'me'.

He just passed away too soon and now that I'm older I'm thinking of questions I never asked.

I can photo the axes and post 'em, but I really think these are just garden variety double-bit. He wouldn't use a single bit, though.

Chaser

BlueRidgeMark said:
Guys like that are a goldmine, if you can get them to talk! I'm still trying to pry info out of my father. Funny - he'll talk to strangers more than to family.
 
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