SeanKroll
Treehouser
Wedging trees is an art that many are not familiar with.
Instead of pulling harder, more wedging!
Instead of pulling harder, more wedging!
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I just meant if you were gonna insist on wedging, that’s all that would do it.Fug no
The monster thin steel wedges they used to tip the redwoods before jacks.Sitting too hard back, you would destroy a redwood wedge before you would get it to sink. So. Still no.
Or did you mean "redhead"
And still, hard head would serve better or magnesium IMO
It’s funny that comes up. After slamming one tree after another for a couple days, I’ve got a lot of felling stuff rattling around in my nugget. Wedging is way harder on back weighted short wide canopy “yard trees” vs. conifers. The hardwood resists bending more. The center of gravity is way further back and possibly much heavier. The conifer is taller and once the weight is shifted forward (usually not having to travel as far) the weight helps you and has the leverage of the long trunk to pull it over. This is why I often use Bjarne’s power wedges and a heavy axe. I put lots of them in there and pace myself beating them.Wedges aren’t that effective in trees with large canopy spreads. You might get the log to tip but the back weight can balance out a lot of wedge.
My SOP for big pull trees is to cut some of the back weight off first. They had the gear on site it wouldn’t have taken that much more time to rig out the back weight so they could destroy what ever pavement later.
And leaving a good hinge is probably a solid idea.