You
don’t need to tell me that felling and cutting trees is dangerous. My extended
family has suffered two losses through woods accidents – my mother’s first husband
and then my half-sister, Nina.
Mike
says that my brother Chuck taught him everything he knows about cutting wood,
and he practices those lessons annually when he and a friend assist each other
in getting firewood. I’m always relieved when they don’t have to fell a tree – and so
are they.
The area in question -- looking eastward from the north field |
Yesterday,
as we continued to clean and clear after the fire, we got into a very dangerous
situation. The pine in question was the one that broke in the lane. It wasn’t
super-big, but it had twined a limb around a buddy pine. After Mike cut it, it
refused to fall.
Every attempt was made to encourage it -- wedges, another cut, etc. -- but it was determined to remain standing. So, Mike attached cables to a limb of the tree and attempted to pull up the lane. The tree didn't fall with the initial effort.
Tree pulled off stump |
With
the second try it pulled off the stump and was now standing on the ground with
the support of its neighbor -- a precarious situation.
Mike climbed tree to attach cable |
Yes,
it was scary, but I preferred we should take care of it nevertheless. So, Mike climbed
the tree to attach the chain as high as he could.
And now it's down |
Then
he turned the Dakota around and pulled from the other direction – down the lane
instead of up. And that did the trick. The tree fell. (The dogs and I were well out of the way.)
We cut only this broken tree. Two other pines remain
standing. But, I suspect I will have to say good-bye to my favorite “pine-apple”
tree. I picked the available apples and made sauce last night. KW
6 comments:
Scarey! Glad it turned out okay. And Mike needs chaps!
Chaps like the clothing or chaps like friends? "Going into the woods with my chaps to cut some logs..." ;)
To wear. Google chaps for chainsaw and you'll find lots of sources for them.
And, after the fire, it is really nice to see the house standing. Yes, watch out for those hung-up trees. Don't be under them when gravity has its way.
that last comment was really from Chuck
When I and my chaps head into the woods, it's best if we wear our chaps. I never heard of chain saw chaps. Mike usually wears coveralls.
Yes, Anonymous Chuck, it is good that the fire moved away from the house. Getting the hung-up tree to fall was a frustrating process, and I'm glad it's over.
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