How'd it go today?

Most embarrassing n frustrating power line fiasco for me was the last day, of a long and arduous removal contract, over a hundred plus trees, on main drags, all over the power lines, the last big tree done, crane loadin logs, I'm sitting down in my lounge chair takin off my tall boots, little brother's knockin out the last few skinny little euc fastigiates capable of hittin the primaries, as I told him to, with a groundie pushin, him felling them onto an old chain link fence slotted for demolition anyways.

But as fate would have it that day, a first day newbie nobody groundie yelled not on the fence! Ran in and pushed the little bitty thing back where it came from and into the primaries, which arced together, fused n melted apart, to fall dancing onto the streets below!

I was stunned at the suddenness of going from a dangerous job well done n over, to a nightmare realized and running for my traffic paddle, dialing 911 on my cell phone, fury with well intentioned rookies and their spontaneous instincts.

It ain't over till it's over, and take your boots off at home, are the two lessons I was taught that humiliatin day.

Jomo
 
Boots off, counting blessings, chilling next to a warm fire with dinner in the oven. Kids are over night elsewhere. Too bad both of us are still a little sick. We could make a really nice evening given the quiet house. No matter, up and atem tomorrow again. Early to bed and all that.
 
Back before the "storm of the century" in -99 when we still had wires above ground, we had to pull a large number of beech trees along a power line leading to a cabin in the woods.
About 20 of them, I think.
All went well untill the second last tree hit the grond wire with a twig and bounced it into the next one, blowing the fuse.
I called the power company and this guy came out to fix it.
He looked at the huge mess of trees laying next to the line, looked at the line and said: " Guess a bird flew into it, we see that a lot.
Fixed the fuse and drove off.

Sure made my day.
 
Not a power line but still embarrassing for my pride. This tuesday, I was piecing down a big black locust. It was in the corner of a back yard, surrounded by some hazelnut trees and laurels, a full ditch just behind (no much drop zone), and had part of its crown over the neighbor shed with shingle roof, metal work on top and a tiles covered fence wall. Don't touch anything of that !
All went well until the last two limbs over the shed. I rigged the long one with a double tip tye (for the side balancing) and a short butt tye, made a side notch, then a careful back cut. The limb started to move slowly, made a perfect horizontal swing, clearing the shed and the fence wall, ending gently in the laurels. I was really happy with the result and the groundies admiring.
I began to skin the limb, no worries now, and dropped a hand full of very small laterals. One of them caught a twig, flipped, and its butt, no more than the size of a finger, hit the corner of a tile. Tac !
Broken tile.
Shit !
 
It's the easy stuff that can make lots of trouble sometimes. Which means it's really not easy we just get too confident. Time for Burnham's signature line.
 
WOW... seen some bumbs... :lol:

No sparky for me today... second tree topped out toot sweet. Nice having the line already in ;)
Then went and did a drop and walk for a nice days pay. Got some other stuff I have been laggin on done this afternoon... Now to line up the schedule for the week. Booked into May, but with all this weather, we have had to be creative ....
 
:lol:

Don't worry Jim, it won't be going into the grinder like that one. Rumor has it most of that damage happened the first day they got it. Bought new to keep the access road open, and the first trip down with it's new plow they put it in the trees. . . Its been through like 5 motors, 3 clutches, original gear box and axels. . . Frames not even rusty. 8)

Blue truck got spa treatment this weekend. Oil change, rear output shaft seal, shocks, belts, (hoses are new), changed the gear oil in the transfer case, checked the differentials, coolant, greased everything. . . new sideboards. I'm kinda sore form the damn concrete floor. haha

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They have evacuated almost 200,000 people by the numbers I heard on the news. This podcast seems the best so far I have seen posted. They lost footage of the dam, but got some. But they are on top of the guys in charge and what they are doing.
So far... Main spill way is letting out 100,000 CFS while the incoming has dropped to 40,000 CFS.
SO the level is dropping. They need to drop the level of the lake by 50 feet. More rain coming and then we need room for snow pack run off.
They are going to try and fill the damaged part of the emergency spill way with bags of boulders to slow the erosion. Then they will need to somehow address the main spill way. The river will hold 200,000 CFS. After that .... flooding.
If the emergency spill way falls apart. They are looking at a 30' wall of water heading down stream. So far, so good :|:


http://www.kcra.com/nowcast
 
Saw a bit about the dam on the news.

Blowing hard here, not sure if I want to climb, but no ground based work to bring forward. Wait till the sun comes up fully to make a decision.

Things always seem different in daylight.
 
We bought a new horse yesterday.
Huge 7 year old Polish warmblood. Nice easygoing, friendly type, used to pulling a wagon full of tourists near Copenhagen, so he is definitely not gun shy in traffic.
I like riding big horses, so he suits me well:) P1050282.JPG P1050313.JPG P1050317.JPG P1050286.JPG
 
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