The Official Work Pictures Thread

Rich/Paul... You guys have to work so much freakin harder for your money than we do out here. Rich... yer freakin nuts. Every time I see one of you guys get pics up... it just stresses me right out. :drink:

Stephen: MAN you guys have some beautiful pines. I don't care if they ARE dead! Good job.
 
Thanks Jed

That one was not quite dead yet.....
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Jdf5EXo6I68" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>
:lol:


Well dead, but just did not know it yet.
 
OK.... promised pictures of the aftermath. Some things went great....

Day 1 of TD... tree went from this....
FB_IMG_1516671397025.jpg

To this
20180124_090841.jpg

Then this day 2 after some morning stripping. High winds came up, but the tree was trimmed out to drop in the zone, putting the top in a clear area in better terrain to burn. Picture is from the alley we were using and made for all the trees in this area. 20180125_094629.jpg

But not all went well that landed. The short ground pretty much did a number on the log. I was threading the needle on some stumps and smaller trees to hold the log to the cross slope, NOPE. The larger butt end headed for the creek we were trying to keep it out of. Stopped just shy of it. You can see the divet behind Rob and some of the pictures that it hit my desired lay, just did not necessarily stay in it :lol:
Also behind Rob is that broken end, that is 34" in DIA for reference.
Felled the tree with the 066 with a 36 bar.
20180125_103519.jpg 20180125_103513.jpg 20180125_103443.jpg 20180125_103430.jpg 20180125_103349.jpg 20180125_103255.jpg 20180125_103219.jpg 20180125_103214.jpg 20180125_103117.jpg
 
Saving under story and re growth.
Also to ease the clean up. Steep slope.
Could not throw tree to creek with out large equipment and then mucking a frosty wet creek out. Big no no.
Other way side slope would have been treacherous to even try to clean up, and if the log rolled, an old water tank was a target. Up hill (the logical solution) was a grove of young black oaks the HO wanted saved.
By stripping the tree, we were able to lay it in a tighter alley way we had cleared of mostly all dead trees. We did lose some live oaks when the large portion of trunk rolled. But they were lower on the list of saving.
Clean up was a huge issue. What I left on the tree pretty much exploded. That was about a 30 foot square area, less of a slope and we could burn in place.
HO pretty much bought and wanted it done this way. I refused to top the tree and lower the tree any further than I stripped it. The loads on the smaller wood could have broke the top out. Even though the tree still had some green, it was brittle from using up it's stores in its limbs and stem. Like it had been drained dry. An end result of beetles and fungus. You can see how easily the limbs just popped when cut in the vid. Most of those limbs were 20 to 30 feet long and heavy as all get out. No "just dragging them off the hill" 100 feet down a deer trail.
 
Those big ripe pumpkins can be hard to save out simetimes, no matter the conditions. Great pics and video, it great you took the time for it all.
 
Thanks Shawn.
There is a lot of good lumber in that alley. Still a lot of board feet in that sugar.
In as much as we did not want the butt log to roll down to the creek like that, it now becomes accessible to large iron that I have access to.
The HO is seriously OCD. He just can't stand looking at stuff. He'll say "just leave 'em lie for habitat" and then pay thousands to yard them out or burn them.
I may have to mill some of those yet. He wants to start down sizing that log deck you can see in the video that was next to the LZ for the speedline.
Deva helped getting some of those trees stripped and on the ground.
 
I have about zero experience working on any type of steep surface. I mean I have, but it was far and few between!
 
Steep enough that last time we worked that potion of slope we cut foot trails to walk it. You are still running a chain saw on one knee almost lying on the slope. One leg stretched out for footing on the little foot trail you cut.
 
Nhttp://www.break.com/pictures/lunch-break-012718-3145352ow, If I were Stig..... Would I have used this size saw? :lol:

I'd probably have brought out the mighty 25" bar for that one, Stephen.

When the forestry school visited us this week, I took an 18" bar to the absolute limit, just to show the kids what can be done, if you know how.
In fact, I even managed to amaze myself a bit:lol:

A dead stick like that , landing hard because it has no branches. No wonder it busted apart.

Some of the stuff you do, just looks absolutely epic.
I love seeing your pictures.
 
Just caught up on your stuff CV. Nice work. Those tall crispy pines, I can’t even begin to wrap my head around that kinda work. And those slopes are just another issue.
Jed I didn’t comment on that dead tree because it seriously scared the hell outta me. Glad it went well , but damn, be careful man. If that thing would’ve failed, what would you have proved to anyone?
 
Sometimes there is no other option but to climb what I call "idiot trees" - because that what we are climbing something that should have been killed years ago. I hope the owner was punished financially for it at least.
Glad everything went well on such a shitty mess Jed.
 
Yup, charge accourdingky. Or right of refusal. Need to go home to family at the end of the day. Jed, I have pulled a few of those apart just because they were that ugly.
Hope you at least pull tested it. Hate the spiral death wobble.
 
I like the ancient species thing.
Mike just sent me a few more from that pine job. He had a nice video capture from below of a limb floating off. I wish I could down load it.
 

Attachments

  • FB_IMG_1517086178285.jpg
    FB_IMG_1517086178285.jpg
    273.6 KB · Views: 42
  • FB_IMG_1517086172026.jpg
    FB_IMG_1517086172026.jpg
    292.3 KB · Views: 41
  • FB_IMG_1517086159436.jpg
    FB_IMG_1517086159436.jpg
    100.7 KB · Views: 42
  • FB_IMG_1517086143834.jpg
    FB_IMG_1517086143834.jpg
    144.3 KB · Views: 41
  • FB_IMG_1517086137877.jpg
    FB_IMG_1517086137877.jpg
    208.5 KB · Views: 43
  • FB_IMG_1516671397025.jpg
    FB_IMG_1516671397025.jpg
    174.3 KB · Views: 42
I can sure see that. Most of the pulling of trees I did was directly adjacent to active mountain streams...noisy. Without radios, it would have been near impossible, really.
 
Back
Top