We use the logs for rough milling or projects around the park. We flip the forest because they are in poor health. The military carpet bombed tree planting 150 years ago with no management plan. The trees are failing and the forest has no under class trees coming up....so we flipping it. We stump grind ammend then replant with irrigation systems installed.
Good pictures...two questions from the pict with the yellow strap in it:
1. What was the yellow strap for?
2. Was that cut from a lead you took out, growing right beside a sister lead?
3. I see a leather cambium saver...did you climb with that limb as your TIP? Not sure I would have trusted a dead pine limb for a TIP unless I had a lanyard on the tree as I ascended...maybe something I am not seeing there?
The yellow strap was attached to a Rig pulley to lower some limbs that were to big to deal with by hand. The cut was a smaller secondary lead that I dumped out before the primary. The dead limb was part of my TIP for sure, but I had a couple other large limbs on the far side and the climb line was wrapped around the whole stem, if it had failed I wouldn't have went far. I was climbing on spikes with a wire core, I was just using the climb line when I got close to the top to keep my weight close to the stem as possible, it let me keep everything weighted and go slow. . .
I know Scott, I thought real hard about setting up some kind of remote SRT thing, but man, those trees were not as tall as they look in the picture. It felt like a really long swing into the building. . .
And this is why I love watching game film with you guys. Glaring mistake ^^
Climbed 15' to scope this broken for for the bid from another vantage point.
Bid about 3k including crane at $600-1000. Probably maybe need the jib to dangle off. If the top shifts and drops free, I am concerned it could spear downward and flip over backwards or sideways, worst case scenario. The boom will sorta parallel the broken top. I would rather pay a bit more to put the job on, and off, if it will be safer.
In the third picture, the odd dead looking limb is normal sized, and horizontal,just close up, and hard to understand a bit, at least on a small screen.
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