Work Photos

A few quick shots of a recent project
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Nice photos guys.

That's on my list at some point Rico is to get a dump trailer. Cheaper than a chipper but if you cut stuff up right you can fit a whole tree in there. I've done it before lol.
 
We'll I'll spare you the very mundane pictures of a guy doing tree work just like any other guy but I did work. The crane is down so I took some time (not by choice) to do some contract climbing. Did a 4 pine job yesterday with a stick crane. Company policy is no hook riders so I got the pleasure of climbing some 100+ footers with ivy for the first 50'. Also gave me the opportunity to try the tree motion for the first time. I liked it a lot. I ascended with a medium saw on me and it was nothing. I've never liked leaving the saw on the ground then hauling it up. The extra weight on the saddle didn't feel bad at all. I've climbed 3 times since march and it felt really good to get back in the saddle,. I still love the feeling of finishing the cut and watching a few thousand pounds sail away from me. I miss being a climber but my hips tell me to stop waxing nostalgic and get the crane back in service. I have to say my mood last night was better than it's been in months. There's just something about climbing a tree that hits the reset button for me. Seems a few thousand in repairs hits the reset for the cummins. Guess we both needed some time apart.
 
Climbing after a long period of not climbing (well, not that long) does a good mental reset on me.
Maybe start a bonsai collection. Tiny pruning after Mek'ing and FF all day might be a good reset.

Changing over to quiet and manual fine pruning after felling and dismantles trees is a similar. Variety is the spice of tree work!
 
Climbing after a long period of not climbing (well, not that long) does a good mental reset on me.
Maybe start a bonsai collection. Tiny pruning after Mek'ing and FF all day might be a good reset.

Changing over to quiet and manual fine pruning after felling and dismantles trees is a similar. Variety is the spice of tree work!
Good idea. When you locate some spare time send it my way. Lol
 
Funtime activity today: Dealing with some black locusts leaning over a barn. The strategy ended up being standing on the barn roof using pole saws to remove branches small enough that they could fall on the roof without damaging it to get some weight and bulk off the top. We then got a rope at the top, pulling diagonally back (away from the barn), and felled it basically parallel to the barn but with a tapered hinge.

Patented double pole saw technique for especially wiggly trees (holding branch in place with hook on one saw, cutting with the other):
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A view from the roof on a beautiful fall day:
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If the straight up lead is high and sturdy enough, my favorite way to do it is to tie in on the straight one as high as possible, come down to the target branch, flip line around it, climb out from either side (normally with it on my left), stripping branches as I go out, all the way till the very end, then coming back the same way cutting and tossing logs. Works for me and I call it "side kick limb walking" method. I'm sure there is a formal name for it. I can't imagine I'm the only one doing that.
 
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I love my Lucas. Simplistic genius that can be easily set up anywhere, handles big logs, produces perfect beautiful lumber, and does it at a very quick rate. I will never go back to a band-saw mill. Ever.
 
Interesting puzzle yesterday. Dead Elm, 2 failed leads, each on its own house. No high trees nearby. No access, no drop zone. We installed a roof anchor and used 3 porty's, 4 lines, a mini and a pole saw. I finished off the climbing. Super cool rigging scenario. Multiple different rigging points on other small trees. Was quite the evolution.IMG_3392.webpIMG_3395.webpIMG_3398.webpIMG_3400.webpIMG_3404.webpIMG_3405.webpIMG_3406.webpIMG_3407.webpIMG_3408.webpIMG_3409.webp
 

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