Regionally it must be somewhat different. I remember Al not believing it, but it happened. The buyer picked it all up from my yard for that price. I can't remember the measurements on the main log but it was a good size.
I had posted it years back on here as a thread I think. I got 3G for a black walnut tree. The log and all the bigger limbs sold raw to a guy who had it custom milled to make into grandfather clocks.
My Unc lined it up. I flipped him a g on the deal.
So the point of this notchless felling is to tip a tree or a spar to its natural lean with one cut. And yourself and the other proponents of this method believe it to be as accurate as a properly gunned face? Or just that it's such an incredible time and work saver that it should be used in...
I'm really not following your logic here? Are you saying you cut a face that had mismatched cuts, didn't even or clean it up so it missed the lay and you think it would've gone better with no face at all? Not to sound to much like an ass but if you can't identify problems in your notch before...
I'd rather see trees fell like this, a little one we did this morning. I was gonna cut it notch less but then remembered that I wanted it to actually go where it was supposed to.
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Feller bunchers have taken a lot of good jobs out of the woods around here. So the handfaller only gets to work the odd oversized and the crappiest steep ground.
Big business makes more and the guys on the ground get the shaft. Here in BC they are used a lot in the interior. A contractor has...
I'm with Cory on this. There needs to be some clarification of what the technique is and what it's being used for. Stumpjumping or just cutting and pushing smaller stems over with just a backcut is sop until some measure of control is nescessary.
KISS. I don't find it hard. I don't feel that...
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