Maintenance Chief
Disrupting the peace with an old chainsaw
- Local time
- 6:51 AM
- User ID
- 11378
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2020
- Messages
- 4,110
- Reaction score
- 13,378
- Location
- South Carolina





Where does all the metal come from?On and on it goes.
1 more day should see us out.
Another high stump, everything is full of metal here
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I purposefully put my hinge in the root flare on this one to help steer it away from a building. It worked.
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Just another spruce. There's a bit if rot in some of them.
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If it's not an oversized spruce full of metal it's a big dead ash.
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Do you think this tree had metal in it?
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Who wrapped the saw? Looks slick...View attachment 472961View attachment 472962View attachment 472963#2, nice to have a young guy buck everything up.
Mostly fences.Where does all the metal come from?
Came that way.Who wrapped the saw? Looks slick...
Most interesting metal I've hit in a tree was what looked like a piece of a cast iron decorative hanger about a foot into an old 6' diameter Valley Oak.Mostly fences.
But some trees had old buckets, horse shoes etc embedded in them.
I've seen worse.




Why the big hinge?Back to removing ash die back trees.
The first two pictures are of relatively healthy specimens but the customer wanted them removed as he's building a shed beside them.
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When in doubt leave a big hinge.
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The tree on the right is alive and healthy, the two on the left not so much.
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This was 3/4 of the way up.
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One of these trees was loose at the roots. After we felled it we could rock the stump back and forth an inch or two. I thought it felt wobblier than usual when I was climbing it to set a pull rope.
Heavy side lean, keep it on course.Why the big hinge?
We finished this job on Tuesday.Back to removing ash die back trees.
The first two pictures are of relatively healthy specimens but the customer wanted them removed as he's building a shed beside them.
View attachment 473223
When in doubt leave a big hinge.
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The tree on the right is alive and healthy, the two on the left not so much.
View attachment 473224
This was 3/4 of the way up.
View attachment 473225
One of these trees was loose at the roots. After we felled it we could rock the stump back and forth an inch or two. I thought it felt wobblier than usual when I was climbing it to set a pull rope.



I had used them before and was impressed but I found the doubled wedges gave more lift on that tree.I think those things are for little trees
Seems the wood would absorb impact force and or break. Angle steep too.I had used them before and was impressed but I found the doubled wedges gave more lift on that tree.
Ill try it again tomorrow
Geez! Looks like you spend as much time with the ivy as you do with the wood, gotta be frustrating!Another ivy giant
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Disgusting
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Leprechaun or some other kind of fairy ever drop out of that Ivy when you're felling it?Another ivy giant
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Disgusting
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2 or 3 times as much, not even joking. Its a disaster when you have to leave the job tidy, like in someone's garden. The worst is when youre working on gravel and the bits get all mixed up into it.Geez! Looks like you spend as much time with the ivy as you do with the wood, gotta be frustrating!
(edited for crappy spelling)
Birds, dead branches, lots of water, dust, insects, dirt, snails, slugs, TV ariels etc etcLeprechaun or some other kind of fairy ever drop out of that Ivy when you're felling it?




