I've been faithfully reading this thread since like January. I'm way back on page 230 but really enjoying everything that you guys are sharing here.
I'm no faller by any means, my logging consists of a bit of recreational milling and that's about it. My dad was a faller for P&G in the 80s. I've learned a lot from talking to him and from pointers he's given me, but I'm very very green and probably always will be. I've always loved being in the bush and running saw, but the ground here is pretty decent and our wood is small so everything is pretty well done mechanically now. I'm glad that forestry allows us to use our firewood permits for milling dead standing trees, it allows me to experience a bit of what might have been if I was born twenty years earlier.
Anyway, here are a few of me dropping a pine for milling last weekend. Dad has me using a humbolt and trying to get it as close to the ground as I can. He said he always tried for as low a stump as possible. For me I try to get 3 ten foot logs out of one tree as the crown tends to branch out beyond that and I may only get two tens and an eight out of a trunk this size. This one is a pretty big pine for here.
I'm running two 2100 Husqvarnas. The one in these pics was dad's last new saw of his pro career. I've rebuilt it to as close to as new as possible and set it up exactly how he ran it, half wrap, double dogs, 404 full comp on a 33" bar. Love these older huskies.
I'm not so good at lining up my cuts yet. I think a lot of it is still a bit of nerves mixed with excitement. Usually after I look at a stump after I've cut the tree I can see a mistake I've made and figure out something to try on the next one to correct it. I've definitely been trying to look up lots to develop that habit as second nature especially with always falling dead wood.
Thanks for the entertainment and great reading in here.