fritz423
ArboristSite Lurker
The best laid plans of mice and ranchers...
Video and photographs rarely tell the whole story or present the situation in a manner in which a tree can be properly evaluated. In this video, there was enough information to see what went wrong. It seemed obvious to me that the tree's COG was going to make it go where it went. A pull rope ... or at least an anchor rope positioned 90° from the preferred direction of fall ... should've left the fence intact.The best laid plans of mice and ranchers...
The best laid plans of mice and ranchers...
Can't see any of the cut nor the fence???
I usually cut in daylight........
That's what it looked like to me as well. Possibly a wider notch, thicker hinge, wedges, and a pull rope would have made it go where he wanted.Hypoxylon killed oaks like that are so brittle they have no holding wood. Once it started coming over the hinge snapped and it followed the lean.