jakethesnake
I Am The Snake
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Nice job , you stumps look pretty good!Dropped a couple large trees this week for a neighbor.
First one was a 48" White Oak that was dying and next to one of the garages on their property. This is the largest tree I have ever cut down. We counted 180 rings, +/- a few...
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I put notches on both sides so I could cut the 48" tree with my 42" bar and not have to come in from both sides or do anything fancy. It was leaning a little bit kinda in the direction we wanted it to go. We had a bull rope out to the loader with a little tension on it, but it was going with the hinge and even the wedges didn't really do any work, but all were in place for safety. All went per plan.
Here's a short video of it going over.
https://youtube.com/shorts/MrQbVRz2EQ
The second tree was a 30" cherry that was leaning over the new pavilion they built. Not sure why they didn't have it cut prior to building the pavilion, but the big storm that came through last weekend made them rethink some of the trees and limbs in the public areas. There were about 3,000 guests there during that storm...
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Used a Sizwill notch to throw the tree about 70* to the right of the lean. It was leaning directly toward the peak of the pavilion roof. It keeps the tension holding wood more flexible so it doesn't snap off when the face cut closes. Also had the loader on the pre-tensioned bull rope to also ensure it stayed away from the roof... I'm a belt AND suspenders kind of guy...
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It was a productive week and we got this all cleaned up and all the logs brought over to my place to process.
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My adaptation to that is, "better to have a rope set and not need it than to risk your life setting a rope that should already be there"Nice job , you stumps look pretty good!
I always say it's better to have a rope in the tree then be "that guy" who ruined everyone's day.
I think the suspenders are awesomeDropped a couple large trees this week for a neighbor.
First one was a 48" White Oak that was dying and next to one of the garages on their property. This is the largest tree I have ever cut down. We counted 180 rings, +/- a few...
View attachment 387571
View attachment 387572
I put notches on both sides so I could cut the 48" tree with my 42" bar and not have to come in from both sides or do anything fancy. It was leaning a little bit kinda in the direction we wanted it to go. We had a bull rope out to the loader with a little tension on it, but it was going with the hinge and even the wedges didn't really do any work, but all were in place for safety. All went per plan.
Here's a short video of it going over.
https://youtube.com/shorts/MrQbVRz2EQ
The second tree was a 30" cherry that was leaning over the new pavilion they built. Not sure why they didn't have it cut prior to building the pavilion, but the big storm that came through last weekend made them rethink some of the trees and limbs in the public areas. There were about 3,000 guests there during that storm...
View attachment 387573
Used a Sizwill notch to throw the tree about 70* to the right of the lean. It was leaning directly toward the peak of the pavilion roof. It keeps the tension holding wood more flexible so it doesn't snap off when the face cut closes. Also had the loader on the pre-tensioned bull rope to also ensure it stayed away from the roof... I'm a belt AND suspenders kind of guy...
View attachment 387579
It was a productive week and we got this all cleaned up and all the logs brought over to my place to process.
View attachment 387580
Big gut, small butt = suspenders...I think the suspenders are awesome
Always wondered where my butt went?Big gut, small butt = suspenders...
My kinda people’sBig gut, small butt = suspenders...
I think I've seen more spruce barber chairs than any other. Not my favorite to cut.Got fancy with this Spruce spar.
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Didn’t work though. I made the cut too high and spars have no shock absorption. The hinge tore at about 30 degrees into the fall. I don’t think even a step hinge would have held. Spruce is very brittle.
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Without the canopy weight it probably wouldn’t barber-chair, but I couldn’t really take a chance in that location. I bore cut it and only left 2” of hinge.I think I've seen more spruce barber chairs than any other. Not my favorite to cut.
I like the idea of the grain being perpendicular to the cut but I’m reluctant to put my face cut deeper than 40%. About the only time I do that is large blocking cuts on vertical spars. I’ll have to think about pros and cons there. Probably would have been fine in this case-Just for discussion and learning’s sake-
I didn’t know they were brittle. Knowing that and the situ based on recent studying I would face it deeper, put the hinge in the center where the grain is running the other way, 90° to the cuts, also “sawing some lean” into the spar. Maybe gut the hinge leaving the more flexible sapwood.
Or Coos Bay it. Looks like not a lot of room to move the hinge back.
Remind me what a step hinge is…?
Coos bay gives you, essentially, zero control. I feel there are ways to "guide" the fall, but even then there's no guarantee.-Just for discussion and learning’s sake-
I didn’t know they were brittle. Knowing that and the situ based on recent studying I would face it deeper, put the hinge in the center where the grain is running the other way, 90° to the cuts, also “sawing some lean” into the spar. Maybe gut the hinge leaving the more flexible sapwood.
Or Coos Bay it. Looks like not a lot of room to move the hinge back.
Remind me what a step hinge is…?