I have lurked on this forum for some time now and am grateful for the wealth of information and techniques its members willingly provide.
I'm a reasonably experienced amateur feller with a full compliment of equipment: Husky 55 saw, Echo pole saw, several 20-40' 3/8" high test chains, 1/4" airline cables, come-alongs, pulleys, full safety equipment and a track-loader. I don't do any climbing and will use the crawler to make challenging situations less-so whenever possible.
I had occasion last weekend to take down a tree that was more challenging than most I attempt. I got it down successfully,... not perfectly, but I think safely.
My hope, in making this post, is that some of the more experienced folks will review the precautions and technique I used and point out things I may have overlooked or provide other suggestions for improvement.
I wish now that I had taken some pictures of the setup... but a description will have to suffice. I do have some after-the-fact pictures showing the location and the stump here.
The situation was that I had a 16-18" diameter, 90-100' tall tree, located about four feet from the house, with a partially hollowed out base that has had significant carpenter ant activity for the last several years despite repeated treatments by an exterminator.
The tree's close proximity to the house made it easy to secure a 150' 1/4" airline pull cable about 25' up in the tree just over a substantial branch that prevented the cable from slipping downward when tightened with a come-along.
The tree had a slight lean away from the house in the direction I wanted it to fall. I cleared out a nearby 6" diameter tree that I wanted removed anyway and was in the intended direction of the fall.
Probing the hole in the tree with a stick revealed the hollowed out section was at least four feet in height. I opted to cut the tree higher than normal in the hope that there would be more wood there and so I would be in a better position to make a rapid exit if necessary.
To reduce the chance of a barber chair and prevent the trunk from moving towards my primary exit path I wrapped one of the 3/8" high test chains around the trunk several times, about a foot above where I was planning to cut and secured it the same way to a nearby 20"+ tree.
I carefully cut the notch intending that it be about 25% of the width of the tree hoping that would leave more wood for the hinge. That cut barely exposed some of the hollowed out center. I then cut the backcut. I reached a point where I began to be concerned about how much hinge I had left, despite the fact that the tree wasn't moving, so I stopped cutting and decided to use a second 200' cable/come-along to pull the tree over.
The tree was moving slightly and it was evident it was just a matter of time until it would come down. It fell, partially, before I was finished securing the second chain/come-along to a tree. When it fell, the right hinge broke and the tree fell about 20' to the left of my intended path causing it to get hung up in another tree. (Remember that I'm not closer than 200' or so to the tree at this point). I finished hooking up the 2nd cable, and within a couple minutes was able to easily pull the tree the rest of the way down.
You can see after-the-fact pictures of the cuts in the above link. My assessment is that I should have made the notch shallower (though I'm not sure how to know in advance how much wood you have to work with... drill it?) and that my backcut was a little sloppy resulting in a thinner right side hinge.
Besides that, I think this was done reasonably safely. I'd be interested in other's assessments... in particular with regard to safety things I might have overlooked and suggestions as to how this might have been done better.
Thanks!
- Mark
I'm a reasonably experienced amateur feller with a full compliment of equipment: Husky 55 saw, Echo pole saw, several 20-40' 3/8" high test chains, 1/4" airline cables, come-alongs, pulleys, full safety equipment and a track-loader. I don't do any climbing and will use the crawler to make challenging situations less-so whenever possible.
I had occasion last weekend to take down a tree that was more challenging than most I attempt. I got it down successfully,... not perfectly, but I think safely.
My hope, in making this post, is that some of the more experienced folks will review the precautions and technique I used and point out things I may have overlooked or provide other suggestions for improvement.
I wish now that I had taken some pictures of the setup... but a description will have to suffice. I do have some after-the-fact pictures showing the location and the stump here.
The situation was that I had a 16-18" diameter, 90-100' tall tree, located about four feet from the house, with a partially hollowed out base that has had significant carpenter ant activity for the last several years despite repeated treatments by an exterminator.
The tree's close proximity to the house made it easy to secure a 150' 1/4" airline pull cable about 25' up in the tree just over a substantial branch that prevented the cable from slipping downward when tightened with a come-along.
The tree had a slight lean away from the house in the direction I wanted it to fall. I cleared out a nearby 6" diameter tree that I wanted removed anyway and was in the intended direction of the fall.
Probing the hole in the tree with a stick revealed the hollowed out section was at least four feet in height. I opted to cut the tree higher than normal in the hope that there would be more wood there and so I would be in a better position to make a rapid exit if necessary.
To reduce the chance of a barber chair and prevent the trunk from moving towards my primary exit path I wrapped one of the 3/8" high test chains around the trunk several times, about a foot above where I was planning to cut and secured it the same way to a nearby 20"+ tree.
I carefully cut the notch intending that it be about 25% of the width of the tree hoping that would leave more wood for the hinge. That cut barely exposed some of the hollowed out center. I then cut the backcut. I reached a point where I began to be concerned about how much hinge I had left, despite the fact that the tree wasn't moving, so I stopped cutting and decided to use a second 200' cable/come-along to pull the tree over.
The tree was moving slightly and it was evident it was just a matter of time until it would come down. It fell, partially, before I was finished securing the second chain/come-along to a tree. When it fell, the right hinge broke and the tree fell about 20' to the left of my intended path causing it to get hung up in another tree. (Remember that I'm not closer than 200' or so to the tree at this point). I finished hooking up the 2nd cable, and within a couple minutes was able to easily pull the tree the rest of the way down.
You can see after-the-fact pictures of the cuts in the above link. My assessment is that I should have made the notch shallower (though I'm not sure how to know in advance how much wood you have to work with... drill it?) and that my backcut was a little sloppy resulting in a thinner right side hinge.
Besides that, I think this was done reasonably safely. I'd be interested in other's assessments... in particular with regard to safety things I might have overlooked and suggestions as to how this might have been done better.
Thanks!
- Mark