Okay, one more piece of info I’ll add before I go to sleep. After a little more looking into it, oak wilt has NOT been found in New Hampshire! I’m not sure what other risks summer pruning can cause, but I think that was the big one
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Another question I’ll add: are there effective preventive measures I can take to mitigate the risks of summer trimming, such as using a latex spray to protect the cuts?
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I live in New England, specifically NH. Is it really that bad to trim oaks and other species during the warm months? I’m worried I’ll lose work by telling customers I can’t start a project for up to 5-6 months. But on more importantly, I absolutely don’t want to leave behind a trail of diseased...
Barrington! So right on that line haha. I think you’re spot on with that too, the terrain gets a rougher around there. I’m leaning towards an articulating loader
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Usually when material hits the ground, brush under 12” is winched or dragged to the chipper. Logs bigger than 12” are cut to manageable pieces where they land and hand carried to the truck, or if I’m lucky and the customer doesn’t care about lawn damage I’ll winch logs to an area where someone...
What size giant do you have, and how is the lift capacity? Does it have a grapple? Wondering how it compares to a tractor of the same price range. Seems like the main pro would be avoiding lawn damage & more nimble, and the cons would be lower lift capacity & less diverse applications
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I work in the seacoast area of NH. It’s pretty rural, mostly backyard work. I think tractor seems like the most cost effective option for now… they’re cheaper and probably have more lifting power I would think. That with forks & a skidder winch on the back could get a lot of work done.
I don’t...
Mostly backyards, and often on grass. I’ve been using my chipper winch to moves logs when I need to- I always give the customer a heads up that I might dig up their lawn, and I think I lose some clients to crane companies for that reason. Being able to move logs without damaging grass too much...
I started a tree service two years ago and I’m finally at the point where I can afford some larger equipment.
I’m in between getting a tractor, skid steer, mini skid steer, articulating loader or excavator… what would you say is the best bang for the buck if you could only have one? My budget...
It has a few moving parts which would be difficult and expensive for me to make. & I don’t have machining skills. More like paper-mache.
Main thing is I’d like to avoid dumping money into making a prototype with no promise of any return.
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Hello tree people. I have an idea for a tree climbing gadget that I’m interested in selling. Anyone have any experience with doing something like this?
Basically I have no desire to manufacture, market, or sell my product. I have the design and I want to sell it to a company like DMM or Petzl in...
What information do you relay? How do you know the rescue dummy’s condition? Do they tell you if he’s alive, dead, injured etc?
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Thank you!! Lots of great advice in here. I think the work climb and throw line will be my strongest events. Definitely going to read up/ watch vids on Ariel rescue, and study the scoring system
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I think everyone pretty much covered the main points so I’m going to add something new: *use the chipper winch as much as you can and utilize redirects!!*
I will set up multiple redirects if I have to, to pull logs and brush piles around buildings or obstacles that stand between the chipper and...
Ever since experimenting with different double rope redirects, I’ve been utilizing DRT more often on bigger trees.
Brings me to my question: can I set a running bowline as my canopy anchor, ascend SRT on the spiderjack, and switch to DRT once I get to my TIP?
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