D
Deleted member 83629
Guest
standing or on the ground i cut it.
You can ask for one more thing, which they did, and that is, when something is questionable or doesn't seem quite right, stop cutting and get "the forester" (where's that coffee cup emoticon?) out on the ground. They did, and saved themselves down time and fines and all the unpleasant stuff. In other words, they were good to work with.
So we can use "The Force"?It's all dangerous work!! You're always inches away from a spinning meat grinder, just waiting to find tissue. Nobody has mentioned the **** storm that awaits the newbie bucking loaded timber or limbs.
It doesn't have to be vertical to mess you up or kill you. Learn about the geometry & physics of loading. The end results are no broken equipment or bones.
The very best thing someone can do, is seek out someone locally to get first hand instruction. Doesn't really matter if it's the old logger down the way, or a GOL course.
And now I'll give you the same advice I give my boys. . . 'Be a time traveler." How do you do that you ask? Easy, be a forward thinker. Think ahead always, be five or ten steps ahead mentally -- it can and will save yer butt.
wow just because someone is new on this forum ,they don't know what they are doing? ok paul bunyon
wow just because someone is new on this forum ,they don't know what they are doing? ok paul bunyon
wow just because someone is new on this forum ,they don't know what they are doing? ok paul bunyon
Sometimes we get new members who's advice is good. Sometimes we don't. In this case the advice was bad.
A lot of people post here and don't have any real experience. They're good at re-phrasing what somebody else said and making it seem like their own hard won knowledge but it soon becomes apparent that they don't know what they're talking about.
Most of us have heard that "I've been cutting wood for a zillion years and I know what I'm talking about" speech too many times. Bad advice is dangerous advice in this business. We won't put up with it.
I have cut wood for a Zillion years, and I dont carry a wedge in my back pocket. Doesnt mean I dont have one or two in the truck and i aint afraid to walk back and get one when I need it. Cutting blowdowns I seldom have need for a wedge. Trees are either already down or leaning way over and are only going to fall one way no matter how many wedges you use. Biggest danger I see with blowdowns are limbs under pressure. I will start at the top and work my way toward the butt end of the log if I can. If there is one big limb on the bottom side of the tree holding the tree up, I save trimming it for last. Pinching and hangups while bucking can be advoided by simple careful observation of what the log will do once cut. If log is hanging in the air, then you know the end is going to fall down. Undercut the log to start and then finish the cut from the top. If the log is suspended on each end, then you know the middle where your cutting is going to go down. Start your cut on the top and finish by undercutting from the bottom up. I have started from the top and cut down to bottom thru one side and then watching the log for movement cut across the topside and finish the cut by coming up from the bottom. And sometimes I screw up and stick the bar, but this is rare and why I keep two saws with me when I'm cutting wood. Wedges are great for falling trees where you want them to go, but looking at the lean of the tree and making proper wedge cuts and back cuts will put every thing but the most stubborn tree on the ground where you intended for it to fall.
Enter your email address to join: