NickfromWI
King of Splices
- Thread Starter Thread Starter
- #51
Gerber = Fiskars.
love
nick
love
nick
Why not just buy a Marvin Nick?
Ok, if you guys are muscling around huge big ass trees then go for your marvin whatevers.
But for precision pruning out on tips NOT whacking off great lumps of wood, the Fiskars is invaluable. Nick might have broken nine of them, I'm still going on mine five years in with minor adjustments.
Tip pruning and thinning elms, poinciana, avocado, golden shower, callophylum...30-50'...fantastic tool.
My marvin makes precision cuts on small wood.
Do they make one with a pivoting cutter head and that DOESN'T have a rope hanging off it? This thing is just EASIER to use. There's no bones about it. And it's the perfect size for the work we do.
Every time I used "normal" pole pruners (which is what every other tree service I've ever worked for carried...and there have been about 7 of them)... I hated them. They were too heavy and too clumsy for me. I never felt like I could make a half decent cut with them. And the whole business of having to hold the pole with one hand and the rope with the other- it just seemed awkward and not thought out.
So though the pruning stik is not made robustly enough to supremely rock my world, I doubt I'll ever switch to what everyone else is using.
I'll happily replace these things even if I gotta buy a new one every month.
And no offense taken. I know they are not for everyone. I'm just super picky!
love
nick
Non-pivoting heads leave dog ears when you can't come at them from the side. It's a truth and there isn't a way around it.
Someone had a pole pruner head that was angled. I considered that one for a minute. I usually have the cutter on mine angled to like 15% or so anyways and I adjust it every once in a while
love
nick
i use a jameson pruner head on a six ft pole, same design as marvin but with a sap groove on the hook. maybe its just the trees we have here, but i find that almost all the branches im inclined to pole prune are limber enough to pull with the hook to put in position to make a proper cut. does that make sense?