whadja do today?

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
mike515

mike515

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 31, 2014
Messages
410
Location
The magical cow kingdom
20150308_190307 (2).jpg

I cut some wide shelving boards today from this Ash that I cut on my mill. 18 inches by maybe 8 1/2 feet or so. I have plenty of this stuff so I figured I might as well start using it. It will be used in some things I'm building for my house after it's renovated (which you can probably see the havoc of in the background...but we're getting there).
 
no tree to big

no tree to big

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Nov 4, 2010
Messages
2,411
Location
lombard, il(chicago)
Jeff, if u post pics of the beach there must be girls! It's a clearly written rule!


Jus a we lil elm 50" x 10' butt log
aee85450563ad1624be9034e091838b2.jpg
 
treebilly

treebilly

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Dec 8, 2008
Messages
1,070
Location
n.lawrence<oh
A bat tree is a tree that is favorable for migrating Indiana bats to roost in. Rough or loose bark open cavities or lots of deadwood. We have to remove them before the bats migration pattern hits our area. We got till the end of March to do about 100 removals for the gas company. Most need to be just put on the ground but the 30 my crew has are complete clean-up as they are within the city. Large cottenweed, willow, shagbark hickory are a few of the types of trees. When it gets to the rural ROW's I think the people deciding which trees are bat trees just walk the lines and get high all day. They'll mark one tree and not another of the same species closer to the pipeline. Anyhow I think it's a money thing some do gooder thought up. Kinda PITA but I'm on unlimited OT till the end of March
 
mike515

mike515

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 31, 2014
Messages
410
Location
The magical cow kingdom
A bat tree is a tree that is favorable for migrating Indiana bats to roost in. Rough or loose bark open cavities or lots of deadwood. We have to remove them before the bats migration pattern hits our area. We got till the end of March to do about 100 removals for the gas company. Most need to be just put on the ground but the 30 my crew has are complete clean-up as they are within the city. Large cottenweed, willow, shagbark hickory are a few of the types of trees. When it gets to the rural ROW's I think the people deciding which trees are bat trees just walk the lines and get high all day. They'll mark one tree and not another of the same species closer to the pipeline. Anyhow I think it's a money thing some do gooder thought up. Kinda PITA but I'm on unlimited OT till the end of March

That's interesting because the literature I'm seeing and being given by the company we mainly contract with is requiring us to avoid those trees and preserve the habitat for the bats with the full enforcement of the state DNR behind it. I live in Iowa btw. I have no explanation for the difference.
 
treebilly

treebilly

Addicted to ArboristSite
. AS Supporting Member.
Joined
Dec 8, 2008
Messages
1,070
Location
n.lawrence<oh
These trees are within the utility ROW. They will be using the full extent of the ROW for the replacement project. We take the trees down prior to migration so they'll roost somewhere else. We do have some type of turtle in our area that'll stop a job until it sees fit to move on. I'll see if I can get the paperwork for the Indiana bat regulations in my area. I know things vary a lot from state to state
 
mckeetree

mckeetree

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
May 4, 2007
Messages
6,392
Location
Dallas, Texas
View attachment 410075

I cut some wide shelving boards today from this Ash that I cut on my mill. 18 inches by maybe 8 1/2 feet or so. I have plenty of this stuff so I figured I might as well start using it. It will be used in some things I'm building for my house after it's renovated (which you can probably see the havoc of in the background...but we're getting there).

What brand of mill do you use? I really want to get one. A guy told me I would have to get a kiln and some more stuff...started talking $75,000 investment minimum. Is that true?
 
tree MDS
Joined
May 8, 2007
Messages
11,490
Location
CT
It would have been nice, especially for the side by the wires...but it would have created its own headaches too. That would have also made another guy almost a requirement...both of which drives up the price.

Must've been a lot of up and down without a bucket. Looks like a good tree for some old school roping skills either way though. Nice work.
 

Latest posts

Top