Topping trees for supports

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It's not too bad, especially on a single stem conifer. Just size it up and use the same techniques you'd use for falling a tree. Look at limb weight, that's a big factor in topping.

The big thing with topping is a barber-chair scenario where the trunk splits open as the top is going over. That has the potential to maim or kill you. The trunk splits and then
grabs your lanyard and pulls you into the tree, and your climbing belt/saddle crushes your body. Tie both ends of the lanyard off to one side of your belt, so if that happens, the
lanyard can break loose without pinning you to the tree. A lot of hook-tenders climb and top without a second tie-off point, so if their lanyard goes, they're falling to the ground.

The chance of the top striking you while its' going over is small, but there can be real issues if you say, cut your holding wood prematurely or if it's real windy. If you're making the felling cuts near the limb line, manually limb it up a ways first so you don't run the risk of being struck by a limb.
The first time I climbed and topped a decent sized tree, I knew little about real climbing. I did it with a simple back belt and a steel-core manila lanyard. I didn't know the risks and I was young and stupid (as opposed to being old and stupid.) Everything went well for me but one slip and I would have been a dead duck.
 
One scenario I have heard is where you top it and as it goes the top strikes another tree and wants to push the butt back on you. Looking forward to finally get to top one just trying to find out as much as possible. Thanks Jacob.
 
I always took a double wrap with my flip line, and hooked both ends to 1 ring like Jacob J said. With a double wrap, if your hooks come out while you're doing the yahooooo ride, you won't slide all the way to the bottom.
If the backward barberchair thing bothers you, you can wrap the top with a small chain. I don't know if it would help or not, but it made a guy I know feel better about the splitting thing. :laugh:

Andy
 
One scenario I have heard is where you top it and as it goes the top strikes another tree and wants to push the butt back on you. Looking forward to finally get to top one just trying to find out as much as possible. Thanks Jacob.

If you get into a situation like that where the stand is so thick that the top could back push on you try piecing the top down in two or three shorter cuts. It ain't as "manly and macho" as dropping the whole top but screw that noise. The object is to safely top the tree, hang the rigging, and go home...every time.

The one thing I remember from my climbing days ( somewhere back in the Paleolithic Era) is that you'll find out real quick how a good a shape your legs are in. Or aren't. :D Take your time, have somebody take pictures. Your first tree is a special one.
 
I've rigged hundreds maybe into 4 digits of tail trees and support trees. I can literally count the number of support trees I've topped on the fingers of one hand. More common to top tail trees but even that a small percentage.
You don't need to top trees for safety that do not have a crew working under.
Mostly when you are thinning, topping supports can get dicey because of putting it into another tree. I never nailed another tree but even a roll of the top will make you cinch up.

Topping a tree out in a clearcut is a different animal. Nothing to it usually once you pulled the saw up.

As for piecing the top down, chains on the top and changing your hookup on your belt. Christ, who has time for that. Leave the top in it unless you have a cold deck around the tree to swing or there is a lot of back whip when the engineer dumps the skyline.
 
First question is does the tree need to be topped? Topping a tree will not improve its health. Techniques should be the same for topping as felling from the ground. You just don't have an escape route. You should have a good working knowledge of tree felling from the ground before you try it from the air.

Next is OSHA rules require two points of connection whenever using a chainsaw in a tree. If you think the tree might chair then wrap just the bole of the tree below your topping cut. Also I'm a fan of manipulating the tops lean by removing a few limbs from one side. Wedges work too but can be tricky when your 30+ ft up a tree.

Also a good pair of boots and shin wraps for your spurs will go a long ways to making your climbing experience less miserable.
 
Hooking both ends of the flipline into one ring while topping a tree is a new one to me. I started with a wire core manilla flipline but changed to regular wire core 25 years ago. I'm not going back. I like to easily adjust the length but then I am not topping really big trees and the little climbing I do is more tree servicey than logging. The way my knee has been feeling the last few days I may never climb again anyway.
 
Hooking both ends of the flipline into one ring while topping a tree is a new one to me. I started with a wire core manilla flipline but changed to regular wire core 25 years ago. I'm not going back. I like to easily adjust the length but then I am not topping really big trees and the little climbing I do is more tree servicey than logging. The way my knee has been feeling the last few days I may never climb again anyway.


I'll send you some Excedrin...as soon as I get it back from Redprospector. In the meantime, quit whining and get back to work. :laugh:
 
I'll send you some Excedrin...as soon as I get it back from Redprospector. In the meantime, quit whining and get back to work. :laugh:

I'll have you know sir that Friday my knee was killing me and would hardly bend and I had to crawl through a hole in a chainlink fence a dozen times but I put in a full day!!! But I'm in danger of running out of ibuprofen. My nephew says only Advil works for him, not the generic stuff. That was news to me. Oh and I broke two saws Friday. My dipstick was fine BTW. And I spent all day Saturday BBQing spring lamb. So there.
 
If you'd just go ahead and pay the admission price at the gate you wouldn't have to be crawling through a hole in the fence.

Nobody asked about your dipstick. There's a reason for that.

And how come you didn't let us know you were BBQing lamb? I'm sure a bunch of us would have showed up and made sure there weren't any left overs to deal with. Just to be helpful, ya know.
 
I don't know how many trees I ve topped . Probably getting over 500 maybe more . You want to know whats HARD WORK , climbing and topping yellow cedar with a 2100 Husky with a 36" bar . That was before I broke in cutting and I hadn't learned about using a shoulder strap for packin my saw . All the loggers I worked with tied their saw to their climbing belt.
Like Hump said , not much reason to top lift trees . Unless its a swing tree where you are going to walk the swing yarder along the road and swing the blocks adn move the tail holts as you go. I've never chained the bole of the tree .

The biggest problem guys have is topping too short . The best climber I've seen would go way up to where the tree was 6-8" thru and tpp it there . Th
 
On the subject of climbing . I got my new climbing belt pretty much finished yesterday.
IMG_20120507_130005.jpg

Front view.
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Left side.
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Right side . So far I only have about 50$ into it for leather . The 6" nylon strap I found in the ditch along side the highway and the 2" strapping was the long ends from my load binder straps for my truck . The buckle came from a CLC tool belt and the D rings came from my climbing belt that I bought new in 1982 .
I need to put about a quart of Huberds shoe oil on it . And get a good climbing rope from Harbor Saw . The rope thats on it now I made myself .
 
We don't usually top our lift block trees, but for intermediate supports it seems smart.

I have seen the supports both topped and untopped. It seems to be hooktender preference. On the tail trees, the hooktender would top and guy it well if it was used for more than one setting The soils were rocky and the trees were not large. That's what he told me, as he was recruiting me to pimp for him--they were short handed.

Just be sure not to put the support rail thing on backwards. Listen when the forester tells you she thinks you have it on backwards. Right now she can't remember whether it should be the letter C when looked at from the yarder or the letter J....Now let me find the picture of men who didn't listen. :smile2:
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