Tree felling vids

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any idea what kinda tree that was? I'm guessing white oak and I can see them doing that. But hickory is notorious for it
 
It would be interesting to know the common breaking strength of saddles. I'd have to pull mine out to look, but hopefully the pressure was more on the front of the harness than the back in which case he might be just fine. Otherwise that could be a few thousand pounds of force crushing his back. I didn't hear him scream, and his hand was still on the rope, so I think he's fine.
 
Yo, help a brother out. I'm trying to figure.

Bjarne: Daily he's cutting 4'-8' diameter old growth on steep ground in canada, I presume BC. Bjarne is a good sawyer , no better or worse than anyone here with a decade or two of experience. Like most any faller, he enjoys the work.

Old growth by definition is likely not renewable.

Clear cutting steep ground is problematic re erosion and regeneration.

Cutting old growth according to many experts exacerbates sudden climate change.

What do you think of his videos. Do you think what he and others are doing day in and day out is problematic or do you think perhaps more along the lines of people need their cedar fences and shingles, and there is enough land and trees out there that there is no reason to worry about high production industrial logging in defacto wilderness areas.

According to our old buddy Reg, Canada has an abysmal environmental record.

Thank you for your input.

 
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I am of the opinion that there is enough second and third growth forest in production today in my part of the world, that we do not need to be cutting old growth to meet our needs for lumber and other wood fiber. Both private, and state and federal government owned.

In fact, there is a huge backlog of volume that is going unharvested on US national forests in the PNW. That volume of board footage on the stump grows ever larger each year.

What the situation in Canada is, I cannot say. Here, we have required and for the most part enforced reforestation, which has resulted in these millions of acres of managed stands prime for harvest today. Maybe Canada didn't do this. I do not know.
 
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