isn't that a fact! I know guys broke in and never cut a green tree for a year. Just learned how to get good at the ugly ones.
That's some brutal old-school initiation. I bet it makes a fine faller of the graduate, and sends plenty packing.
isn't that a fact! I know guys broke in and never cut a green tree for a year. Just learned how to get good at the ugly ones.
View attachment 514287
My Bullbucker cutting an 8ft spruce snag on my quarter.
He asked me on the radio the day before nearing the end of the day if I was going to get it done. I said I would do it in the morning when I was fresh and he said that's what he would do.
He was cutting next to me and he was comming over to go over the bucking card the next morning. I was dropping my rakers and he started cutting with my spare.
As soon as I finish he just reached out for me to pass him the better saw..lol. I new that was comming. Just made my day that much easier.
Snapped a few pics and a little vid he can show his grandson.
In the big snags more so the Cedar its usually the one your Falling because the tree comes down in slabs. You can't cut the middle out often because of all the splits so huge slabs peel out of every direction. Pieces start to drop or hang off higher up. The back starts separating from the heart and moving out of the cut. Sometimes you pound wedges in to try hold the weight from toppling over the middle that isn't all cut because you can't get anymore from any side without getting pinched
When the back starts to go then get out of there. You have to keep making undercuts taking the slabs one at a time. Always conventional on these unstable ones because you don't want a slab to slide down and fall back at you. They are lots of fun
Sounds like a cool idea but I don't think I want myself getting the bug on the windshield treatment recorded, I'm following the going down in a blaze of glory idea you've got and had an image of America's funniest home videos type thing in my head but I've been to far to many fatal car wrecks for traffic control that I don't wanna see somebody get kilt on video. It's not sounding like I'm thinking it out in my head and I mean nothing derogatory toward your post Hddnis just a thought in general that ran astray lolBig old dead pine snag full of ants that was miserable for me and could have been a close call. Got pretty scared cutting it, I always swear the next one like that I'll use a trackhoe or some sort of explosive.
I really hope my last tree is something spectacular, gets a billion hits on youtube, and years later at my funeral they play the footage as an example of how good I was and how I kept on working into old age. Odds are against that though.
View attachment 514287
My Bullbucker cutting an 8ft spruce snag on my quarter.
He asked me on the radio the day before nearing the end of the day if I was going to get it done. I said I would do it in the morning when I was fresh and he said that's what he would do.
He was cutting next to me and he was comming over to go over the bucking card the next morning. I was dropping my rakers and he started cutting with my spare.
As soon as I finish he just reached out for me to pass him the better saw..lol. I new that was comming. Just made my day that much easier.
Snapped a few pics and a little vid he can show his grandson.
In the big snags more so the Cedar its usually the one your Falling because the tree comes down in slabs. You can't cut the middle out often because of all the splits so huge slabs peel out of every direction. Pieces start to drop or hang off higher up. The back starts separating from the heart and moving out of the cut. Sometimes you pound wedges in to try hold the weight from toppling over the middle that isn't all cut because you can't get anymore from any side without getting pinched
When the back starts to go then get out of there. You have to keep making undercuts taking the slabs one at a time. Always conventional on these unstable ones because you don't want a slab to slide down and fall back at you. They are lots of fun
Hard to be scared of something you've never seen. I haven't walked up to a situation in the woods scared. Wary yes. I'd like to see some pics from you occasionally just so i know your not full of ****.definitely a cut up and run situation lol you shouldn't be scaring bitzer with those west coast pics Jamie.
Hard to be scared of something you've never seen. I haven't walked up to a situation in the woods scared. Wary yes. I'd like to see some pics from you occasionally just so i know your not full of ****.
That's why I don't go anywhere without my Stihl MS290 FARMBOSS!No face is permissible if your saw is faster than the tree can fall
Northmanoffewwords yesterday. Ok I guess we will write our own ending....this afternoon, there are a couple of dead snags leaning over a major road, that I was fortunate enough to be called to "help" with... not real thrilled about this one...
And how much control of that "one we never saw comming" does the faller have control of wouldn't you all think? Whether it be extra cut up trees or breaking of tops from brushing or wedging.You won't know which tree kills you. The one that gets you will be the one you never saw coming.
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