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I just want to…climb!Maybe she has huge.......tracts of land.........
Sounds like you made an impression! You stud muffinCome on guys, lets, um, talk about trees or something![]()
Fully understanding that I only know you gents via the Buzz, it’s still funny to me. When did I last ever hear someone say “stud muffin” anyway?Sounds like you made an impression! You stud muffin
My man. IdiomMaybe she has huge.......tracts of land.........
That’s cause your not hangin around our islands.. if you did I’m sure I could find a pet name for youFully understanding that I only know you gents via the Buzz, it’s still funny to me. When did I last ever hear someone say “stud muffin” anyway?
In other words, you're down as long as it's nothing serious?I said I was happily single![]()

My first power pole saw was the big Stihl gas, and I loved it just in terms of the new ability it provides. I do a lot of low deadwood or limbing of firs for long driveways, etc, so you just need to get some horsepower, otherwise you will die with a manual polesaw in your hands, shoulders hurting, job half done, haha. Also great for hazardous work to make cuts form a safe distance, but I don't have to explain the benefits of the tool to you obviously.
The Stihl has a lot of power, and sometimes I need that for bigger cuts, but it's pretty heavy and well, its a gas tool and battery tools are just so much more pleasant to run. So I got the Husky, it feels light and sporty in comparison, but when I made the very first cut I was already disappointed with it's lack of power. The chain can't be touching even the smallest twig, or it won't start spinning up. And, push it just a little, and it stops itself in the middle of your cut and that doesn't take much. I deal with those annoyances and make it work, and I grab it over the Stihl gas 90% of the time just because it's so much more convenient and lightweight. But I carry both because sometimes I need to make those big cuts.
I saw videos about the Milwaukee and its great cutting performance, and thought it would be what I was looking for, convenience of battery tool, with cutting power closer to the gas one. And it is those things, but god it feels heavy. It does look and feel like a solid pro-level tool. It can pretty comfortably cut wood as big as the 10" bar, where the Husky starts to struggle around 5" wood and you have do do that carefully. The Milwaukee you can just lay it on wood, pull the trigger and it will dig right through. But I find myself wanting to use the Husky if I don't need the power, because it's just so much lighter and easier to run. I also find the throttle mechanism on the Milwaukee annoying.
So: Stihl gas - powerful, heavy and loud. Husky battery - light and kinda weak. Milwaukee battery - powerful and heavy.
None is perfect, I was just hoping the Milwaukee would be the goldilocks tool that met all my needs/wants and it just doesn't.




Laser felling cutsCouple rotten madrones this morning-
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