We had a microburst go through the area near our camp. Lots of downed trees. The nearby campground had 10 RVs (campers, trailers, whatever the vernacular is in your area) completely crushed. Seven more were damaged. No injuries fortunately.
We had a 60 foot pine tree come down. It was far enough away that the wispy top branches just brushed our cabin. It brought down 6 other trees as it fell. Only the big one landed in the open. The rest stayed in the woods.
This is looking from the snapped off base. ML is in the picture for scale.
The following weekend we hauled up our gear to begin the removal. This is pine and not worth the work for firewood. Though we did save a bit for campfire wood. We have spent three weekends working on this.
This is ML cutting.
All the brush and wood was dragged to the clearing edge and dumped over an embankment. This pile is about 10 feet deep and 20 feet long. A lot of brush.
Lastly we had about 25 feet of 24 inch diameter trunk that we removed yesterday.
Our big saw has a 20 inch bar. I had to cut this from both sides as the tree is wider than my saw. After cutting about half way through the weight of the two pieces settled and would bind the saw. The trunk is to big roll to complete the cut. ML hammered in plastic felling wedges. This re-opens the cut and holds it open. The wedges are plastic as opposed to metal in case you hit them with the saw. Better to destroy a $5 wedge than a $29 chain
I insert the saw in the kerf and complete the cut. I still have to cut from both sides due to the diameter.
We pushed, pulled, used a timber jack and cussed to get the logs rolled to the woods and over the embankment. The logs were about 5 feet long.
This is the area all cleared. Such a lovely sight to see after all that work.
Next weekend we can relax the whole weekend, Whew, I am looking forward to that
We had a 60 foot pine tree come down. It was far enough away that the wispy top branches just brushed our cabin. It brought down 6 other trees as it fell. Only the big one landed in the open. The rest stayed in the woods.
This is looking from the snapped off base. ML is in the picture for scale.
The following weekend we hauled up our gear to begin the removal. This is pine and not worth the work for firewood. Though we did save a bit for campfire wood. We have spent three weekends working on this.
This is ML cutting.
All the brush and wood was dragged to the clearing edge and dumped over an embankment. This pile is about 10 feet deep and 20 feet long. A lot of brush.
Lastly we had about 25 feet of 24 inch diameter trunk that we removed yesterday.
Our big saw has a 20 inch bar. I had to cut this from both sides as the tree is wider than my saw. After cutting about half way through the weight of the two pieces settled and would bind the saw. The trunk is to big roll to complete the cut. ML hammered in plastic felling wedges. This re-opens the cut and holds it open. The wedges are plastic as opposed to metal in case you hit them with the saw. Better to destroy a $5 wedge than a $29 chain
I insert the saw in the kerf and complete the cut. I still have to cut from both sides due to the diameter.
We pushed, pulled, used a timber jack and cussed to get the logs rolled to the woods and over the embankment. The logs were about 5 feet long.
This is the area all cleared. Such a lovely sight to see after all that work.
Next weekend we can relax the whole weekend, Whew, I am looking forward to that