Here is where, poor old logger, trying to make ends meet comes from...(humor)
Many types of conifers have shallower root systems than other types of trees.
I wonder if confiers have a smaller root system? ...It had the most lightning I've ever seen and strong winds. Tree branches broke off all over the place with a lot of conifer species resting on homes.
Near as I can tell BA has been posting in this thread under two names, including having conversations with himself.
Kind of weird if that's the same dude. One alter ego tries to start an argument and the other tries to come across as a likeable chap. Schizophrenic?
Oh and Pulp Fiction, this is a pro arborist site, BTW. Perhaps you should consider limiting your posting to the "Homeowner Helper Forum" on this site? Maybe you should also consider not using something as dangerous as a chainsaw, or you might get yourself killed. Also you might want to post on some other more touchey-feelie sensitive wood cutting site, like say, Saw Haw gz (one word) dot com? I think they would be more than happy to help you out with your kind of feisty savvy over there.
Sorry, not you - there were other interactions.Am I missing something here? Slowp, windthrown, and myself are the only ones with some forms of back and forth with pulp...
Am I the alterego, or did I miss a post and am just confused?
Yeah, no matter how hard he tries to hide it, he's still himself.I lost track of how many user names he had and how many times he was banned under each name. Many user names, many bannings.
He'd run crying to the owners and they'd reinstate him. He'd be good for a while and then start his old behavior again.
Nothing much has changed. He's registered here with at least four different accounts that I know of. I just add them to my IGNORE list as they appear.
I'm pretty ignorant about conifers in general, as we really don't have many in this part of PA, and from what I have seen even in small areas they tend to die and be overwhelmed by vines and invasive species. The hardwoods are struggling too, but seem to hold up better.I wonder if conifers have a smaller root system?
I'm pretty ignorant about conifers in general, as we really don't have many in this part of PA, and from what I have seen even in small areas they tend to die and be overwhelmed by vines and invasive species. The hardwoods are struggling too, but seem to hold up better.
As for the root strength, they did seem to fall over with root balls intact. Then again, we've lost so many big oaks the same way in the last few years I've lost count. The Tulips seem to be much stronger than the oaks - perhaps because there is less mass up top.
Its all designed to be confusing. That is the Brush Ape way. Ignore it.
Sorry, not you - there were other interactions.
Alright, thanks for clearing that up. I thought for a moment I was gonna have to go on the defensive or something.
Do not worry about it. Just put the wood pulp in your ignore file as Bob recommends and you will not see his posts, his comments, or get PMs from him. He knows way too much about things here to be a noob, and as Chris says he is his old self, all over again. Though I think there are several versions of his personality. It must be a 3 ring circus in his head.
Multiple personality disorder... We have had that happen here before. There as a fellow by the name of Talon here that apparently had many AS login names. They supposedly collapsed all his user IDs into Talon, and he left the site. Brush Ape was banned from AS and has since gone rogue, and has logged in as other users. Its the internet. I could be some goon in prison for all that anyone here knows. Though I have met a lot of people on here in person at the PNW GTGs, including Bob/Gologit. There have been con artists that have logged in here wanting to sell stuff too, and we have flushed them out pretty fast.
Well, I have a long history and background, including being an electronics engineer, but I have owned several landscaping and arborist business in Oregon and California. I have owned and operated several plant nurseries, and I have certificates in ornamental horticulture and silviculture. When I joined this site I was living with my ex on a 100+ acre sheep ranch and forest site in the boonies in Southern Oregon. She sent me to silviculture school at OSU in Roseburg and I managed 85 acres of trees there, as well as 100 acres for our neighbor. We burned firewood there, and I have been burning firewood for the past 12 years or so now. I have since bought property here in northern Oregon and I have a small woodland lot here in the boonies. There are lots of boonies in the PNW.
Yeah, some pine I have flares up while other species don't...in a glass front stove, it can be pretty impressive to watch.Burning pine has always been a no no around here and was never sure why. Growing up my dad would burn anything in his insert( pine, pallets, construction scraps). Working as an arborist I have a pretty good supply of hard wood so I've never tried it. Maybe next season when I either have a newer stove and chimney or OWB. I have about 10 cord of Norway spruce that's been cut to 16' lengths, stacked, and covered for about 8 years that I need to make disappear. I could cut down on my hardwood use age leaving me more to sell. Anyway, it's not creosote I'm worried about, it's the high flame that scares me. My chimney only has a clay liner.
Anyway, have you found a lot of tree species that aren't supposed to be in the state? From the official MD website that lists all the trees in the state there's nothing about black locust. I see sellers advertising black locust firewood so I'm wondering where the hell they're getting it if it's not listed on the natural resources site.
Lol, love your sense of humor.
If someone joins in and starts posting right away and more importantly doesn't show up with an attitude ie you or ambull01, you will fit in pretty quickly. If a guy posts here and there, people don't get to know him/her as quickly. I've seen pulp post sporadically and I haven't read enough to formulate an opinion on him. Some like slowp already have.
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