I climbed trees as a kid, but would never do it at my age .More power to you Jim ... especially at our age!
I never did climb, was afraid of heights.
I climbed trees as a kid, but would never do it at my age .More power to you Jim ... especially at our age!
I never did climb, was afraid of heights.
Yepper. I have that from when I had my '55 chevy panel truck. I think all the screws were clutch head on that.Clutch head . Used on GM windows and other places like headlamp doors . Pain in the butt to use
showed me photos of a momma beer
With that description, all we can say for certain is that it's antlerless.Import? Or domestic? Or home brew?
A guy that has cameras out behind our farm next door showed me photos of a momma beer and two cubs behind my house and a 4, 6 and 12 point buck in that same area, plus two does.
Import? Or domestic? Or home brew?
Were they Zig-Zagging? Grease gun at the ready!With that description, all we can say for certain is that it's antlerless.
Id mill threw it. Copper is pretty soft, may dull the chain a bit though.I just had to put a B+C on it and run it today! The bar was only 24", never ran it with one that short before ... she feels very strong (both crosscut and ripping).
Last year my tree guy gave me some logs for milling ... said there was just some surface metal I could remove!!! The small red oak is 36" and over 8' long, the bigger one is just over 7' long.
Today, the 066 did some partial crosscuts and then ripping so I could wedge the pieces up to get a look at the wiring! I thought there was steel in there with it, but I guess it was just a weathered copper ground wire.
What do you guys think, will my chain survive milling through copper? Or should I just keep going till I remove it?
Climbing up and down logs and hitting the wedges with a 16lb hammer is not as easy as it used to be, but I got it done!
When I renovated the bathroom on our new old house, actually tore it off and put on a new one I got into the space above the small room next to it to run new line upstairs. Sitting on a rafter was a giant ball of electrical tape about the size of a softball and 6 or 7 wires going in and coming out. Not ideal.pffffffffff why go to all of that trouble when you can do this!! Twist and tape baby!
In case you're actually wondering yes this is in my house and yes it is live, no I did not do it. So dude named Albert probably did it in the 50s while smoking an unfiltered Camel. I am currently getting all outlets on it rewired, hopefully will be able to turn it off tonight.
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At 71 I didn't know if I could still do it. I never climbed for a living. It all started when I was around 50 and needed to drop trees in front of the farm house. I guess that I have been lucky by not having a fear of heights. I used to climb a tree at my childhood home when I was around 10 years old. I would go all the way up to the top and sit up there for a long time. My mother would come out and yell at me to come down from up there.More power to you Jim ... especially at our age!
I never did climb, was afraid of heights.
I fixed it. Good catch.Import? Or domestic? Or home brew?
None of the above. They were sitting on feed piles the guy put out.Were they Zig-Zagging? Grease gun at the ready!
Haha, that was me too when I was young. Power Co. came and trimmed neighbors tree in the front yard running along the power lines. My Mom found me sitting on the uppermost branch stumps only feet from the power lines. A storm was coming and the tree was swaying. Man did I get a whooping.At 71 I didn't know if I could still do it. I never climbed for a living. It all started when I was around 50 and needed to drop trees in front of the farm house. I guess that I have been lucky by not having a fear of heights. I used to climb a tree at my childhood home when I was around 10 years old. I would go all the way up to the top and sit up there for a long time. My mother would come out and yell at me to come down from up there.
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