Magic Cut for vertical spars, etc

This 36" dbh fir near Puget Sound had the original trunk up to 80', where two 40' co-dominant tops were, until the recent windstorm.

The homeowner is a therapist who had to cancel patient appointments last week, and is booked m-w, so yesterday I rolled solo, wanting to finish the job and move on, without scheduling conflicts, and weather was very friendly, so make hay while the sun shines, especially in January in the PNWet.

I set off with a full tank in my 193t with a 14" b/c, wedge, three-strand rope in case I needed to rig any limbs or the top.
No rigging, climbed up for a small top 3.5"-4.5", wearing pole spurs.

Spar is down to 50-60'. I had a little gas left (I sharpened a few stores, but unfortunately didn't file the rakers, so slower cutting, less fuel 'mileage' than ideal.
70 minutes.
Power line (across asphalt driveway), cable line (orange ratchet strap reminding me of the alignment), power box and trees/ landscaping, below, partially protected with two sheets of plywood.
One narrow car parking lane below (I very much squeezed my dually in, going off the lane somewhat). Some available green space one two sides, also, for cutting and throwing into the holes around obstacles, without landing on my climb line or rigging line.

Chipping mostly onsite, and firewooding.


Someone asked for pics of bigger logs. I had to strip this just below the breakout for about 20-25', pop a 15-20' top, and chunk it down, with a not ideal chain on a 193t.

This is the barest amount of more cutting over a perfectly-executed double-cut Undercut-COG-w/ thin-hinge cut. No risk of the hinge not being cut perfectly, and rocking to one side. No room for logs to go off the target. I cut some extra wood out of the last log to stack on the face-cut, as I didn't get it 'faced-up (without hinge)' the right direction and woulda hit the big maple down below, and needed to direct it a bit, which worked out fine. IMG_20190112_150141010_HDR.jpg
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20190112_134951001.jpg
    IMG_20190112_134951001.jpg
    131.7 KB · Views: 52
  • IMG_20190112_144502199.jpg
    IMG_20190112_144502199.jpg
    269.4 KB · Views: 52
  • IMG_20190112_142204977.jpg
    IMG_20190112_142204977.jpg
    108 KB · Views: 51
  • IMG_20190112_140227489.jpg
    IMG_20190112_140227489.jpg
    313.7 KB · Views: 52
  • IMG_20190112_161057370_HDR.jpg
    IMG_20190112_161057370_HDR.jpg
    312.4 KB · Views: 52
  • IMG_20190112_150146534.jpg
    IMG_20190112_150146534.jpg
    128.9 KB · Views: 52
  • IMG_20190112_164552289.jpg
    IMG_20190112_164552289.jpg
    177.6 KB · Views: 52
That was a cake walk, Gary, honestly. These wind-whipped trees are more 'thin' of foliage than one grown out of the wind. I drug up and chipped those branches in about 15 minutes (I threw them like I was going to be picking them up), and another 10 for a bit of rake and blow (rough clean-up). Packed up all the gear, and rolled.

No employees to manage, just me planning the work and working the plan effiicently, without distraction or supervision (planning for the employee, delegating/ communicating, and ensuring proper completion/ follow-up).


Gravity did a lot of the work. Dinosaur-juice did a lot of the work through machines. I had some coffee, water, and a couple Clif Protein bars.
 
Quote from FB

"I'm self-employed, if you hear me talking to myself, I'm having a staff meeting."

:lol:
 
P.S. I'm not as young as my chipper. I'm 45 y.o., its 43 and hungry. I'm not nearly so hungry as when I started out. Now I eat what's served, barring another reception, knowing more food will be served. The chipper (KiKi, so dainty, the daughter of the previous owner) is a F-ing Glutton, addicted to wood.



Gotta go chunk down that spar today. The homeowner had therapy sessions all week at her home-office. I need to get some Finnish Sauna pics for inspiration.
 
The maple logs in front we're set there by machine.
The fir logs in the back, along with all but one trunk chunk, came down by 'Magic', all where there were supposed to land.
jpeg-imag1.jpg



This log was wider than my 28" bar; I wasn't aiming for a precision hinge cut, so it was easy and fast to chase around.

This was the last cut from spurs. Wider near to far side, than left to right.

IMG_20190118_141649799_HDR.jpg



I had my 42" bar, so I didn't need to double-cut the butt log.

I was in a hurry to get to school for picking up D. Magic Cut on the butt log put it right on the pile, as gravity and physics dictated, quick and easy.



Stig mentioned not misjudging the lean.

A lot of these 6-10' logs closed the kerf enough on the first cut that I had to pull the saw out in-line with the bar, as I couldn't get the bar out where it went in...
Just like any other deep-first-snapcut kerf will close.
 
You've got your bar on upside down.

Don't you know anything about chain saws.
 
Back
Top