Chris-PA
Where the Wild Things Are
I went up to the woods to split some 3' oak rounds because I don't get enough exercise this time of year, and combined with the sinus infection I fought for a week and half I really need it. Didn't take long to wear me out, so I took a break and walked around a bit, and found that a pignut hickory snag I've been waiting on had finally come off the stump.
This is one I tried to free over the summer, but I had misjudged the way it wanted to fold (it was very obvious in hindsight). It had originally fallen over on it's own, part of the root ball and all. I had managed to get it separated from the stump but it was stuck, and I figured I'd let it there for now - it was off the ground and I have to process a lot of oak. It's about 18" diameter.
Since the trunk was now jambed into the dirt I figured I would try to walk it down with progressive cuts up the trunk. I use a "face cut" on the outside (top) and the belly cut is equivalent to the back cut. I do this so that it doesn't try to pop out the side toward me. I got two cuts and had to make the "hinge" very narrow and use a wedge from below to get it to fold each time, and it was hairy because there was plenty of dead stuff up top in the hickory, as well as in the sick double trunk ash it's caught in. I could shut the saw off and tap in the wedge so I could hear and see and be ready to run like heck.
It looked like it might slide down and free itself on the last cut, but that's not to be. It's hung up good now, with the two large top branches of the hickory each snagged on one of the double ash tops. Maybe the wind will pull it down some day, but since the butt is on the ground it will probably rot first. Oh well, I got about 16' of it anyway, but the butt end was already punky.
I don't want to give up on that hickory, but it's a mess now and I don't need it enough to take any more risks for it. Oh, and standing dead hickory is hard stuff.
This is one I tried to free over the summer, but I had misjudged the way it wanted to fold (it was very obvious in hindsight). It had originally fallen over on it's own, part of the root ball and all. I had managed to get it separated from the stump but it was stuck, and I figured I'd let it there for now - it was off the ground and I have to process a lot of oak. It's about 18" diameter.
Since the trunk was now jambed into the dirt I figured I would try to walk it down with progressive cuts up the trunk. I use a "face cut" on the outside (top) and the belly cut is equivalent to the back cut. I do this so that it doesn't try to pop out the side toward me. I got two cuts and had to make the "hinge" very narrow and use a wedge from below to get it to fold each time, and it was hairy because there was plenty of dead stuff up top in the hickory, as well as in the sick double trunk ash it's caught in. I could shut the saw off and tap in the wedge so I could hear and see and be ready to run like heck.
It looked like it might slide down and free itself on the last cut, but that's not to be. It's hung up good now, with the two large top branches of the hickory each snagged on one of the double ash tops. Maybe the wind will pull it down some day, but since the butt is on the ground it will probably rot first. Oh well, I got about 16' of it anyway, but the butt end was already punky.
I don't want to give up on that hickory, but it's a mess now and I don't need it enough to take any more risks for it. Oh, and standing dead hickory is hard stuff.