jamieS
ArboristSite Lurker
I have a large locust tree that will be professionally taken down later this year. It has a nice straight trunk section that is about 20 feet tall, 22" in diameter at chest height, and about 26" at the base. There is another vertical fork higher in the tree about 16" and 12 feet long. I hate the idea of turning that all into firewood...
I've been looking at freehand milling and I think it's right for me. I have plenty of time to go slow and I think this style puts less of a demand on a saw since only a few teeth are engaged at a time. I have some smaller homeowner electric pruning saws with shorter bars, but I'm not that crazy...
So I'm looking to spend about 1000 on all of the things I would need to be safe for a bigger job like this. Bigger saw, chaps, boots, etc.
If it was your money, how would you allocate it? How much to spend a saw, longer bar, and safety gear? Specific brands/models greatly appreciated!
-jamie
I've been looking at freehand milling and I think it's right for me. I have plenty of time to go slow and I think this style puts less of a demand on a saw since only a few teeth are engaged at a time. I have some smaller homeowner electric pruning saws with shorter bars, but I'm not that crazy...
So I'm looking to spend about 1000 on all of the things I would need to be safe for a bigger job like this. Bigger saw, chaps, boots, etc.
If it was your money, how would you allocate it? How much to spend a saw, longer bar, and safety gear? Specific brands/models greatly appreciated!
-jamie