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  1. Gypo

    The Humboldt is primarily for speed of production

    We call conventional faces "farmer faces."
  2. Gypo

    Rope hockling

    Gotcha. I always wrap the wraps the same direction too now that I'm thinking about it. Suppose I could do wraps and braids opposite direction. Thanks.
  3. Gypo

    Rope hockling

    Climbing firs and girdling for the BLM. Anywhere from 60 to 130 ft high. New hyperclimb rope that I've been using about a month. It's a 250' rope that I washed when new, it's milked about 5'. I've run michoacan, knut, and currently trying a VT. Rope hockes bad on decent if I don't get the...
  4. Gypo

    1950's Logging Safety Documentary

    Finley was a crack up. Never met him, but I read his stuff for years. Dad was actually in Loggers World, in an issue from the mid 70s. He was a young buck cutting timber with Kenny Parnell. Kenny was the bullbuck for Christian if I remember it right.
  5. Gypo

    Tree felling vids

    Lack of exercise.
  6. Gypo

    Tree felling vids

    To kill em. 😁 They've got some kinda wildlife enhancement thing they're doing.
  7. Gypo

    Tree felling vids

    Thanks Cory. We're cutting right a way right now, full manufacture, second growth, kinda boring to me to look at. We're also climbing and girdling tops for the blm. So nothing that's neat to watch, imo. Lotsa traversing with the grapple hook I guess.
  8. Gypo

    Tree felling vids

    Bear trap here is generic for any kind of a man killing mess, tree wise. I always thought it came from dead fall type traps, I dunno.
  9. Gypo

    Tree felling vids

    We call that a squirrel bridge. Usually try to fall them over backwards, straight away from the hanger. Bridge is usually pushing the stem in that direction. That, or mash the hanger down with another tree.
  10. Gypo

    Wildlife reintroduction in PNW , Grizzly Bear ... really ?

    One season in se alaska isn't much, I admit. Twenty-two years cutting, and counting, down here in Oregon. I'm not worried about bears for my own safety. I'm worried what they will do to local livestock and wildlife. I put them in the same category as wolves, and if you're a hunter or rancher...
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