treesquirrel
ArboristSite Guru
Removing those trees is not worth your LIFE. Hire a pro.
buy the time you buy all the correct equipment and the class,you'll be well on the way to paying a professional to do it.i'd check and make sure your homeowners covers your learning session.
you have to build muscles up you didn't know you had for climbing plus the wind is different up there.do you know how to recognize a dangerous section in the tree before you climb past it? no matter how much it costs to get it down by someone else,i promise you'll gladly pay it after it's too late and you're messed up the rest of your life.
if you have a few years to wait for these trees to come down.and practice,i'd say go for it.
if you're in a hurry,i'd hire it out.
Good luck and be careful. I like to try to do things myself also and can appreciate your point of view.
I would practice somewhere not over your house first.
Keep us posted and pictures would be great.
If you are planning to stay in the business and cut for a living, then buy all means purchase a couple grand worth of equipment and start practicing on your own trees.
You can do it at your own pace and work from the easiest tree to the hardest tree on your property. It's a great way to learn.
But if this is the only tree work you will do, then forget about it. Hire a service. The Tree Business is too costly and too dangerous to dabble in.
Most people that try to, end up getting hurt.
Something else to think about:
There's a long learning curve with tree work. Without a lot of time, research and help, not only will you not know how to safely do the work ,
you couldn't possibly know even what gear to purchase.
It really boils down to: Do I want to do this enough to justify the considerable expense and commitment to training ?
No one job is worth the money or the risk !
The most important thing, in my opinion, is that if you decide to do these removals yourself, you MUST have another climber on the job with you. The reason for this is two fold: You will probably have to do some rigging if it is over a house, so you will definately need someone on the ground working the rope. The second, and most important reason, is that if you are injured in the tree, you need someone both nearby, and someone who can climb a tree to at least administer some type of first aid until a certified aerial rescue personnel can get to you. Just a thought I had that no one had touched on yet.
I thought they just topped it to a few feet under the wire. (sarcasm)
A few years ago i went back to my parents house and found that the electric company had come through and asked them whether they wanted their beech tree which was three feet in diameter pruned or taken down because it was growing too close to the power lines, maybe ten feet away at the trunk.
They said prune it back.
When they came home from work they had cut the entire tree down to a 15 foot stump, with a one inch diameter branch growing away from the lines.
I must say I about S%*T, i couldnt believe how bad it looked and how bad they hacked it. I mean come on, how hard would it have been to take down one or two limbs growing into the f'ing wires.
Least to say I took the butt down and made some boards. :jawdrop:
I think this is the reason I have such a problem with "line clearance" :greenchainsaw:
How much and how far away will line clearance tree workers usually clear-away the limbs no cost?
Your example is definitely an Extreme one. I have to work around people who will not let us remove some trees that should be, and I have to do it day in and day out. When I talk to a homeowner, most have no idea what will or won't actually damage a tree beyond repair. If I have to drastically reduce a tree to get my clearance I always suggest completely removing it and having the owner plant something that is more suitable for being under the Utility lines. I'm sorry you have a problem with line clearance,(and I don't know you so I'm trying not to take offense) but I don't much care for Holier than thou res. guys who have little to no Idea what is involved in the day to day life of a utility guy. I'm not saying you are one of these guys(again I don't know you), but you kind of come off as one in your post. If I Have it all wrong, then I apologize.