The Official Work Pictures Thread

Hi Ho Silver, Away!

4 Jobs Today:
1). Remove two dying 20' pines. Easy drop-n-chip, less than an hour altogether. Except for the fact that they were totally draped with poison ivy, freshly leafed out. Ugh. I drew the short straw and went in with the Fiskar clippers and climbing saw to clear out the bases -- chopping back the ivy and limbing the lowers for notching. Afterward rinsed off with their hose, wiped down with Grime Boss wipes, then took a trip to the gas station to scrub up my arms. We'll see how it goes over the next couple days as I test out my urushiol sensitivity levels!
2). Rig out and remove a large multi-leader silver maple over a house. Produced a truck & a half of chips (45 cubic yards). Left it at table/planter height per the customer, no stump grinding. They were very happy, amazed at 4 hours on the job. The rigging work and winching big wood levitation never fails to impress. Neighbors had out lawn chairs, watching the show. P1310590.jpg P1310576.jpg P1310595.jpg P1310603.jpg P1310620.jpg P1310622.jpg
3). Drop & chip small ash tree and dead ornamental. Less than 10 mins. on site.
4). Chip up a medium dead cedar that some relative had started to remove for the homeowner, leaving it incomplete. Again, about 10-15 mins on that job on the way home.
 
Maybe a tyvek suit would be better than getting that oil all over you, then washing your arms.

There's some homeopathic type stuff for taking during the dormant season, that preps your body not to react to the oil. My former-FIL got me some once, from a store in Shawnee, OK, IIRC.
 
9e8a3cab4b4a0ad3e22da56c1ee1bc0a.jpg


Took this ugly thing down this weekend. The vines ( whatever type they were) made this a challenge climbing. Shoulda swapped back out to tree gaffs. My pole gaffs is trouble finding something solid to sink into. Was fun but I?m beat. I need a mini skid for the big stuff.

Also started another project at the mill. Still am not finished with the stacker. Now we are starting an automated irrigation system for the logs ( not real sure why the well we currently use works fine it?s just full of iron. Can clean the well the right way every 5 years or so and it?s fine.) but now we are going to pump from a pond we dug and catch what return water we can. Use the well to fill the pond when needed and hope the iron settles out of the water...just doing what I?m told I suppose.

cc5e9fa6e0d9b6492881b3e6a55648ee.jpg
 
Nice job, Denver. It is ironic to me that your lumber company has/had so many big machines (I think you posted you were selling the logging division?) but you don't have a mini skid. Get one!!! SAVE THAT EARTH SUIT!!
 
Yep no mini . Or regular skid steer .
I do use our small excavator when I can but it weighs over 11k pounds. I was going to use it on this job but the ground was still a little to damp from the recent rain to put it in a yard.
 
Get yourself an artic loader like mick's, or larger.

Back in the day nobody had one so it was OK. Now, no reason not to have one imo, even given the expense.
 
So what's your minimum charge on a 10 minute drop and chip FK?
I think we were at $300/tree on that one, with stump grinding included. Poision ivy slowed us down to a full hour for the two trees, when they shouldn't have taken more than 15 mins apiece. Generally, our minimum charge is $150, but we've done small stuff for neighbors while on other jobs for sub-$100 price range (chip small brush piles, take down hangers, grind small stumps).
 
That's reasonable :)

View from the office today
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20180521_121039.jpg
    IMG_20180521_121039.jpg
    162.9 KB · Views: 34
  • IMG_20180521_121021.jpg
    IMG_20180521_121021.jpg
    144.4 KB · Views: 33
  • IMG_20180521_103855.jpg
    IMG_20180521_103855.jpg
    126.8 KB · Views: 33
Pull tree. For some reason this one really stuck with me after the bid. I've just been nervous lately I guess. . .

Cutting it went down like clockwork.

Hope everyone is well

Cheers


33129663_1718809581488309_1386250499224764416_n.jpg

33038084_1718810181488249_1941925087284297728_n.jpg

33140000_1718810254821575_7898805024711507968_n.jpg

33176556_1718810554821545_8278190485378433024_n.jpg
 
That's reasonable :)
We can't be too pricey on a low/no skill drop-n-chip. There's plenty of small fish (guys in pickup trucks) around who could handle those pines for that price point. Plus, here in the Midwest if you price too high, you'll get the famous DIY-spirit stirred up and the homeowner might just try to do it themselves.
 
Back
Top