RandyMac
Stiff Member
ohferchiristsakes!
Quit standing around ya ain't making anything but shade!
Quit standing around ya ain't making anything but shade!
ohferchiristsakes!
Quit standing around ya ain't making anything but shade!
Now, in a few years, I may have to start carrying something. Wolves have been dumped in our state and the bunny huggers are talking about dumping grizzlies. Maybe I should just take up video game playing and fantasize about shooting little cute chippymonks.
On a much different subject, one we fade in and out of. I've got a fairly large white oak (36" - 40") to take down. If it goes one way it will crash over a bank and land in the road. If it goes another it will damage a little dogwood that the owner wants to keep. Yet another way and it will mash an ornamental garden. So it has a very narrow landing zone. Would this be the correct time to use the world famous slopping back cut??? :msp_biggrin:
Just sayin.
You can only use the Infamous Slopping Back Cut if you film the entire process and then vigorously defend your choice of technique. You also have to insult and disagree with anyone who doesn't like what you've done. You're also required to use a saw that runs poorly and a very very dull chain.
No butt crack pictures, though. We do have our limits.
Or...you can post pictures of the white oak, get seventy three conflicting opinions on how you should drop it, and then go ahead with what your gut and experience level tell you. Me, I'd pick dropping it in the road.
bob. i call them sabre tooth mountain weasels around here. singley there not bad, but in groups of five or more watch out.
Couple of b/w photographs from turn of the century showing actual use of some tools pnw axe man posted about a mile back in this thread. Photographs showing good detail of wedges are not that common.
Fallers and Equipment
Buckers and Equipment
Source credits: Clark County Historical Collection.
Fallers
Source Credit: Sierra Nevada Logging Museum
Also always liked the 15" banana wedges.
Compared the 6" wedges of Stihl and the K&H brand. The K&h takes one #### of a amount of pounding with out any deformation, the Stihl takes very little hits before they deform.
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