I watched a large line clearance tree service take down some white pines today, Sunday. They've been at it weekends for the past few. Apparently they work 7 days per week. That schedule is surprising to me. I guess the money is there from the utility or from some grant in CT that is in place following the tree/lines mayhem after the 2 recent hurricanes, a shit load of trees by wires are slated for removal rather than trimming.
Well anyway, these guys are astoundingly, outrageously slow. Yesterday they stopped by at noonish, took down a small pine, slashed the brush, and then chilled in their idling bucket trucks for a couple hours till 4ish when they split. They usually roll up with 5 buckets and 10 or 15 guys and just kind of chip away slowly at the job. Can you imagine taking down an 80' pine entirely with a stick saw? Dicing each branch into small pieces, and then having to later chip up that rat's nest of small pieces? Watching them TD a tree, for the first 1/2 hr or so, you're pretty sure they are just trimming it. After awhile you are like, are they actually trying to take it down? Their goal is same as my company, make stumps out of trees. But the way they do it, it's hard to believe we are both doing the same task cuz the approaches, methods, speed and efficiency are radically different.
So skipping way ahead, it makes me wonder, if a tree service is large enough to handle the needs of a utility or handle a contract in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars, does that automatically mean that they are slow and inefficient and unproductive? It's kind of ironic. Maybe when a company is that large, everything dumbs down to the lowest common denominator, they go as slow as you can go while still actually making forward progress. And/or, maybe their guys are making such small dollars, they can afford to have jobs take a long time. They do have all nice new looking buckets and a sweet log truck shows up long after a portion of the job is done and takes the logs.