Hi gents, have not fallen out of tree YET!!
Hi guys,
So you don't what happened to him?? The old fool is still around and doing a lot of clearing still from last years storms and carefully removing leaning trees and broken limbs.
The most difficult work is dropping Locus trees that have several stems with little or no horizontal branches, and that are leaning over buildings. I should invest in gaffs. These are trees that are maybe 30 - 40 ft high. The fear is that attempting to cut an 8" diameter vertical branch, 20 or so ft in length, will kick back and nail the person doing the cutting. I need a bucket truck for that. Wonder what it would cost to rent one.
There are 27 acres here, and lots of fields to mow, equipment to maintain, brush to remove, cut wood to stack, and hand split. I am a one old man show, with a full time job, which leaves only the week end for tree climbing and trimming.
Frankly, I find the whole thing fun. I go slow and do a lot of thinking before I act. I definitely need a Big Shot. That may likely be the next acquisition.
I cannot thank you people enough for the safety information and other advice you have provided.
My primary tools are a Marvin’s pole saw, trimmer head, and an 17” long Fanno FI-1700 hand saw.
Climbing gear is Samson climbing rope, throw line, throw bags, Weaver saddle, Red Dawg boots from Bailey’s, old MSR helmet that is similar to the Petzel helmet, a 6’ lanyard, and The Tree Climber’s Hand Book.
Hopefully, I will not get into trouble. The hand book is great, but nothing is as simple as it makes out. Limbs are never where you ideally want them to be, and I never seem to throw the line exactly where I want it. Some of the Locus trees have no suitable horizontal branches that would be a safe crotch. Either the limb is a broken stub, or way to small a diameter to trust. So what to do with it?? I don’t have an answer.
Well it is late and I have to get up at 5:00 am, and off to work on hydraulic applications where I make a meager income. But, at my level of education, a meager income is better than no income.
Best regards,
Terry Crowell