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Two ideas come to my mind. Take the dead top of first, so you don't have to wonder about its integrity while working below.Here is one I did yesterday. The limb I'm on still had a little life but top was broken out so I couldn't rig or safely tie out to the tree I was taking down so I rigged to a close by water oak. Had to be careful not to swing dead stuff back into rigging tree. Any suggestions on one like this?
View attachment 49424
True... I almost never tie out to the same point as rigging line but I didn't really like any other angels so I cut very small pieces. Not ideal I know. For sure could have taken dead top first though. ThanksTwo ideas come to my mind. Take the dead top of first, so you don't have to wonder about its integrity while working below.
I would definitely redirect my rigging back over another part of the water oak to reduce bending moment, especially seeing as I was tied off on the same limb. I'd probably do the same with my life line, but that's best with SRT.
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Here is one I did yesterday. The limb I'm on still had a little life but top was broken out so I couldn't rig or safely tie out to the tree I was taking down so I rigged to a close by water oak. Had to be careful not to swing dead stuff back into rigging tree. Any suggestions on one like this?
View attachment 49424

Recently tackled this dead one, this shot is after I cleared the vine covered half by one the fence. View attachment 50274
At some points we did use two . Even three on one piece that I calculated may break. Lots of half hitches down stuff that would crumble. The other thing I felt was worth taking a few minutes to use my basswood pole and knocking off all the small crumbly ends that could shake off in rigging. And taking the weight over the drop zones the crew was working first so as that big dead weight wasn't overheads during other operations. Later as we moved higher or equal to the main rigging point in the yard,which was pretty far away from tree we switched to a ring on dead eye slijng and span rigged a lot as well. Had guy lines and rigging lines from three other trees. As well As my tie Ins that were in two fairly far away trees. Even side loaded I was very confident in the integrity of them as I climbed each tree to access in the morning. It probably took us an hour to set tie in points and guy and rigging lines with apta and hand throws. I took a dead limb off for neighbor in process for a good discount for letting us use his trees. Tworopes made this dream a reality. I shoulda filmed more it was a good one. Here's one pictureLooks like a technical one Treetop. Were you using two lowering lines?
from the bottom up with the new Stein rc2000 I picked up that roped in like two logs , mostly a guy line for the day. And the way a prusik two lines together to chunk down at end with multisling to keep climb line over top away from logs flipping away.Pole saw weighted side and leave the opposite side as ballast
I think August hunickie suggested it in one of his videos, but slice/slash cut the top too minimize lateral forces as the top comes free
1) on conifers, salami cut the tops where possible, to get them down without inducing any bending moment in the stem,
Self-lower your tops, which should be small enough to natural crotch on your own. Why coordinate with an expert roper on the ground when you can be the expert roper, with first-hand, realtime info.
What other provisions are done to keep being whipped by limbs or speared by the butt? I.e., how do you keep the thing from coming straight down in the scenario where there is no lean and the rigging does not impart lateral force to move the piece away as it comes away from the tree.
It sounds like you need sturdy stubs to negative natural crotch rig. Is this correct?
Best to practice this technique in non critical situations where you have a maximum amount of control rather than in a critical situation where all of a sudden you have that "oh shit" moment.No real preparation needed, you could of course snip branches with a pole saw that might hit you if you want... Or stand in a spot that they'll miss you...
However the technique requires a FAST like really really FAST cut to be executed properly, and generally can't be done effectively in more that a 4-6 inch cut (species dependent if course) and any branches that'll hit you are small enough to either break or bend as they go past (also they'll be relatively speaking slow moving since the top hasn't had much chance to drop yet)
The whole point of this style cut is to keep the top as close to vertically upright as possible, so there are no lateral forces generated, usually you cut it so it slides of on the direction of natural lean, if none is present a gentle twist of the saw bar mid cut is usually sufficient to get it moving enough to slide off the cut. Sounds complicated, but in practice is very simple