heartland
ArboristSite Operative
Yup, next time I will definitely have the saw at waist level: I had to work too hard the way I had it in the pics (too high).Originally posted by murphy4trees
As far as saw positionioning I just noticed the AM ad to the left actually has some relevance to this post... the climber is keeping the saw about waist level.. it's easier to control and see what you're cutting when kept waist high... Also looks like he has a lanyard tied in just below the rigging sling and above the block and he's using a pull line.
You are right about the AM ad on the left: looks like the lanyard is tied in below rigging... if that is the case, it contradicts what we learned. The rationale behind keeping both above the rigging point is simply to be away from the rigging. There is less chance of getting mixed up with the rigging when above vs. below.
No pull line used. In retrospect, it would have helped. Only thing to be cautious of when using a pull line is the physics of a "moment arm". Say your hinge is a bit too thick and the groundie on the other end really has to wrench to get the hinge over.... you end up with a lot of unneccesary torque. That torque energy has to be released somewhere: that "somewhere" will be the shaking spar. There is a fine line between all this. You have to balance things out.... If the hinge is done just right, the climber should be able to cut the backstrap and simply push it over - but in that case, a pull line should not create add a dangerous amount of torque.Tim did you not use a pull line on the top of the spar?? Tough to tell how the tree was leaning from the pics..
btw - I left the backstrap and released it with my handsaw. Chainsaw was not running and therefore no noise to interfere with communication with my groundie.