five old firs

  • Thread starter Gord
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Gord

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We took down these five old firs today, unfortunately I don't have any pics that really show the whole trees. Really cool old trees, very gnarly, lots of stuff to snag a rope or anything, funny limbs that start in front of you and turn back over your head. The three that I did were all leaning heavily, which (along with the really fissured and crumbly bark) made some of the cuts pretty awkward. Dusty too. The trees were slated for removal on recommendation of a survey done for the safety of the powerlines which were just dowhill. This was on public forestry land.

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Really cool branching.

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I swung into this one from the previous tree so I didn't have to fight my way past the flat part of the union.

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I keep my rope in a bag for stuff like this. A heavy lean and sprawling limbs/stems mean it's too easy for something to catch the rope on it's (long) ways down.

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Haven't seen a fungus like this one before, it appears to be pretty old. It was at a spot of some advanced heartwood decay. Anyone know what it is?

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The other guy knocking off a log. I had a bit of a rest with a view here.

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You get a bit of an idea of the lean here. The bark was so sloughy on the first 35' or so that I had to shave it off as I went up.

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The other guy rappeling off the spar.

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Dang, Gord...that was some good stuff. A fine video; cool seeing the transfer at the 3:00 mark...those were some nice sized sticks you threw down. Well done all around.
 
those are or were some nice kinky firs. Excellent pix thanks for posting
Hey where are those trees located?

On that conk, was that completely surrounding a branch? Or was it growing off the side of a branch?
 
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #10
Frans that conk was right on the stem, positioned just like in the pic. These trees were just outside of Gibsons (north-west of Vancouver).

Steve it was me and another climber.
 
Gord, without seeing the bottom, I won't say for sure but it looks like indian paint fungus. bad, bad shit if it was. Was the decay a stringy brown rot?
I had a Hemlock on Prince of Wales island volcano on me that had that crap before knew what it was. Absolutely destroyed a 2100 Husky that I left in the cut.
 
I've never seen a fruiting body with that many rings on it, has to be something else I would think. I don't think any conifer can sustain enough sugar for that pathogen to go that long.
 
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #15
Slow and steady I would think. There was a lot of decayed wood inside.
 
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #19
I guess the fungus was Laricifomes officinalis, not a very common one it seems.
 
Always great videos, Gord. I clicked the link for the golf course job and enjoyed another viewing of that one as well.
 
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