The Official Work Pictures Thread

I was wondering about the transporter. I had a dead trunk hinge crumble, dropped on my gear bag and broke one of my caritools. I was debating switching to the transporter, that post made up my mind. thank you.
 
Benn you are a way better climber than I BUT did nobody ever teach you to put your rope around the stem, not the stub???? That was one of the first things I was taught. I do a lot of dodgie shit like tying an overhand knot in a pull line and using that to descend on thigh ddrt, rope on rope . I would never tie round a stub. Funny, guess just how we were taught
 
That was the second day Paul, I just fliplined up....Granted that stub was a little small, but I was tied in twice... Then chunked it down. But no my climbing rope goes over stubs/branches if there is one! Only when taking down a spar is when my mainline will be around the trunk. If thats what you mean...
 
Ben: I don't know how you do it, bro. I'd get the heck out of that city just so I'd have easier jobs!

Ray: Thanks for the pics. You runnin' Red Dogs?
 
Here's another from last week. 3 ailanthus. Remove all ivy to timber height and dead wood/thin. Remove the middle one, which was smothered in thick ivy and twisted and over the back yard with small trees and shrubs.
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not the best cameraman


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Ailanthus, tree of hell. I'm not a fan.

The only good thing about those fence panels is they're easy to replace. Ask me how I know that. :D

Damn that elm looks nasty!
 
Good week here, got suprised. Doing a oak removal with a hint that possibly racoon den or hang out but not seen recently. OK first place I go to isolate my canopy anchor an set rigging line. Sounding tree going up no critters, assessment on sound wood to rig from Check tree dismantled to a safe felling point. Fell the remaining portion and start cutting big end first. Ten chunks in out comes a racoon. Cool it lived. Go back to cutting and out come two more.
Lives were saved but home was lost. I climbed the pine first which I had seen dead about 5 months ago from across the street.
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Coon oak also revealed in the muck below the cavity the complete skeleton of a dead one suprised the heck out of me when removing the pudding to lighten them up to hand load them.
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A bit short on action but work none the less!
 
Yah, you Benn. Try to define the smell of Ailanthus if you dare.

Joel: You might be the first Raccoon skeleton finder in the House. Cool shots.

Absolutely beautiful weather here. The splint is finally off my hand: full-duty, no-restrictions. Fir snag reduction today. Approx 125' by 38" dbh. Just the dead limbs made over 8 yds. of chips. Pig.

Aaron, (posing with logs) is ready for lunch...

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Our early spring is crazy this year... show in the mountains and flowers in the plums...

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Port Orford cedar being chipped or that cherry extract smell of chipping laurel hedges is cool too.
Great log-pop humboldt Jed.
 
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