Hello gents, curious about everyone's opinion on this. I've been cutting on a buddy's land where he sold an easement to a power company along the fence line of his 40 acre property. It's pasture/hay ground, but the fence row is covered up in post oak and hickory about 35-40 feet wide along the fence. Most of it is about 10-14" diameter. The power company will be dozing the fence row pretty quickly, so I've been cutting as much as I can before it gets pushed over. Most all the trees are leaning slightly toward the barb wire for some reason, so I've been falling them against the lean using wedges. On two or three I had to use a steel splitting wedge to get enough lift to push them over (I know that's a big no-no, but I put on my sunglasses/eye protection). I've had really good luck, haven't had one go the wrong way yet. Of course there's been a few that I didn't try because the lean was too great. I've noticed that if I use a little deeper face cut, it doesn't take as much lift to get them to go past the point of balance and fall the way I want them too. I guess it moves the hinge point closer to the center of the tree. On some, I've made my face cut almost half way thru the tree to make sure I have enough lift (stack wedges) to get it over. I would never try this on a tree bigger than 14-16" or so. I'm always watching for a barber chair, but I wanted to get everyone's opinion. Is this safe? Anyone had any problems doing something similar? Is it dangerous to use a face cut deeper than a quarter or third of the tree? Thanks for any input