MasterBlaster
Administrator Emeritus
- Thread Starter Thread Starter
- #19,651
Heck yea!
That is weird, indeed.
Sometimes shit just happens, all you can do is be ready to run.
Reg is right that gutting the hinge would most likely have prevented it from barberchairing.
I do that as standard on ash, but from the back side as I'm making my felling cut.
Just swing the bar tip into the middle of the hinge.
Since one of the biggest problems when thinning semi mature hardwoods is having them hang up in the other trees, unless one has a skidder to hand, I usuallu gut most of my hinges to make the trees fall faster and make them easier to roll of another tree when they fall.
4 tons of wood, 22" wide by 60' long coming down missing him by no more than 3'. He was on the ground tangled in the brush and the whole thing was done in about 3 or 4 seconds, no time to move.
Seeing the scene with my own eyes, it was really freaky to see how incredibly close he had come to instant death.
He added on a huge one right next to it, wow I tell ya I was careful cutting that one. Freaky stuff.
Too big to rake and too small to be worth bending over for... Or leave a firewood size stub and then cut it off.
Stig, any particular reason you gut an ash from the back rather than the front?
Do you gut any trees from the front that you could gut from the back?