I'm going to look at this tree for a friend of mine. He wants to mitigate the hazard.

I may change plans depending on what this alleged 20-24" DBH looks like in person, but this is a current thought. (1) Set a line in one of the other trees, climb and start dropping limbs. (2) Before there's a chance for movement, tie off the leaner to the main tree it's hung on with multiple wraps of an old piece of 7/16" climbing rope. Just tie off one side of the major fork that appears to be straddling the standing tree. (3) Cut everything off the spar except the fork that's keeping it in place. (4) Cut the side of the fork off that's not tied off, so spar will drop slightly and load the tie-off. (5) Cut the knot off, sacrificing a couple of feet of rope, and let the spar drop.
The base of the tree is half uprooted, but there's enough that it shouldn't want to roll. Will need to keep climbing rope well away from any possible contact and possibly have another climb line set further away should I need to come down before the spar comes down (in case it doesn't drop to the ground.) Due to the weight of the spar, I don't plan to try lowering it down. Even with double whip, not enough safety factor for my taste with the rigging I have.
To me, that seems like a safer approach than doing any cuts on the spar from the ground, which "I ain't a gonna do." And there's always to option to walk away.
Any comments?

I may change plans depending on what this alleged 20-24" DBH looks like in person, but this is a current thought. (1) Set a line in one of the other trees, climb and start dropping limbs. (2) Before there's a chance for movement, tie off the leaner to the main tree it's hung on with multiple wraps of an old piece of 7/16" climbing rope. Just tie off one side of the major fork that appears to be straddling the standing tree. (3) Cut everything off the spar except the fork that's keeping it in place. (4) Cut the side of the fork off that's not tied off, so spar will drop slightly and load the tie-off. (5) Cut the knot off, sacrificing a couple of feet of rope, and let the spar drop.
The base of the tree is half uprooted, but there's enough that it shouldn't want to roll. Will need to keep climbing rope well away from any possible contact and possibly have another climb line set further away should I need to come down before the spar comes down (in case it doesn't drop to the ground.) Due to the weight of the spar, I don't plan to try lowering it down. Even with double whip, not enough safety factor for my taste with the rigging I have.
To me, that seems like a safer approach than doing any cuts on the spar from the ground, which "I ain't a gonna do." And there's always to option to walk away.
Any comments?












