Visited the Arborwear store in Chagrin Falls, Ohio on Monday. It was pretty cool. Good deals in the clearance area. I just got a couple $10 work shirts but they have saddles, chainsaw pants & boots etc to try on. There’s a waterfall in the middle of the town.
Pretty cool! I like these types of small scale effective solutions. What sprays/diseases do you see using it for mostly?
The usual suspects? spruce, crabapples, the random bagworms and whatever else pops up?
I figure this topic relates closely to the “what’s your small equipment set up” post where we talked about small chippers and small scale operations that mostly focus on pruning.
I’m wondering how many out there are successful with leaving chips on site. I know this isn’t applicable to tree...
My least favorite part of offering planting as a service is locating and purchasing the trees from the nursery. If I had the space and could grow my own trees, I think it would be easy to sell them to customers because for the most part customers depend on us to tell them what species would work...
Velcro seems like it could work. I was also thinking about a quick connect like in this picture Phil shared. Where the saw hit my hand was the very bottom teeth of the blade, and sometimes my pole saw scabbards don’t seem to completely cover the bottom teeth. I want to make sure it’s completely...
All healed up. I got lucky it was such a minor injury to learn a valuable lesson. Hopefully this post will help somebody else take a little extra precaution when using a pole saw while climbing.
Thanks for asking!
Just listened to this two-part most recent discovering forestry podcast. The arborist they interviewed was brutally honest in a way that made me chuckle talking about his experience in the trade. It’s always irritated me growing up in the skilled trades when so many people these days say things...
What kind of chipper is that? I don’t know why, but I am intrigued by European chippers. I think because they seem to specialize in smaller scale chippers geared more for pruning. Forst is selling in the US now. I remember you saying they can be a headache.
Just a thought but I think repeat pollarding visits would be hard sale where topping silver maples is the norm. When I lived in Northeast Tennessee I worked on countless previously topped silver maples and I just cut out the dead & thinned the canopy. At the time, I thought I was doing crown...
As an owner operator, I don’t really consider myself a salesman, but I am the salesman for my little business since 2004. I did start off knocking on doors which looking back took a lot of nerve. I actually really enjoy meeting with people and talking to them about their trees. A lot of people...
My local hardware store had Milwaukee gloves from cut level 1-5. I got the 5. They also had winter options.
Hopefully it’s the kind of tacky palm that grips the rope well, those coatings can really vary.
Also looks like there might be an extra layer right where my injury happened.
I’ve worked with what I considered to be elite climbers in the past who say pole saws are a crutch and good climbers don’t need them.
I am not an elite climber and appreciate the extra reach:-)
My local Ace Hardware carries the Milwaukee gloves, which is nice, but I don’t know how much protection they would have provided in this situation. Possibly enough to not need stitches?
Amazon has a ton of options like the attached. I’ll have to do more research about the different cut...
My guess is if I would’ve had on something like this Kong glove, I probably would’ve got cut but wouldn’t have needed stitches and could have stayed and finished the job. But they can’t grip a rope for crap.
I had on a typical showa Atlas climbing gloves.
I was really looking forward to getting this job done and I started with a black walnut tree that had some pretty good size branches hanging over the house they wanted removed. I decided to take my pole saw up which I really didn’t need. As I was wrestling some of the cut branches to toss down...
I’ve had the opportunity to change the name and logo of my business three times since I’ve moved to different states. I started off with “tree service” to “tree specialists” to finally deciding I needed to incorporate the word “Arborists” into the name. Been happy with that decision.