Chainsaw,  Foresty,  Landscaping,  Machinery,  wood chipping

Weekend update

Happy Thanksgiving. We had a busy weekend.

On Friday afternoon, we met up with Dave Restoule, the arborist we worked with a few times before to take down the remaining trees at my Moms place. In May (hard to believe it was that long ago) we worked with Dave to take down, I think it was 4 maple trees that were 70 feet tall. Got a nice bit of firewood from those. Some were rotten at the base though.

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Taking down the maple trees in May

This time we were tackling the 6 remaining trees that were pine. Most of the branches on the bottom two thirds of these trees were gone from weather and age. They were definitely top heavy. Also there are power lines between the trees and the pavement. They weren’t a problem this time.

Here is what they looked like before we started.

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Project pine tree takedown

Jim and I made two trips over to the job site. First trip was to take the chipper over. Second was to take the skidsteer and the trailer over. We got all set up and wouldn’t you know, the chipper refused to start. Now, we had just been using the chipper recently so we figured it wasn’t the battery. After checking, the battery indeed had full charge.

We decided to get the trees down and worry about chipping the branches later. We prefer to chip as we go, then when you are done cutting the last tree and it is all chipped, you are finished. This time we had a real mess to clean up after the trees were all cut.

Dave started on the first tree.

Dave,arborist,trees,pine
Better him than me.

He climbed about 2/3 of the way up the tree, which were very slippery,  and tied his ropes. Then Jim took the other end and tied it to the skidsteer. Once he was back on the ground, Dave would start cutting the tree.

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First one to go.

Jim would keep the rope tight and on Dave’s signal, Jim would back up to ensure the tree would fall where we wanted it to.

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One down, five to go.

Since we weren’t chipping right away, Jim and Dave would cut the branches off the downed trees and we would make piles near the chipper and also to get them out of the way for the next tree to fall.

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Dave Restoule
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The first of many piles of pine branches.
Jim,arborist,pine trees
Man in motion.

This picture shows a tree on its way down. They make an incredible noice hitting the lawn. And some of the branches dig into the lawn.

pine trees,
TIMBER

At the end of Friday, we had all 6 pines down, but more work ahead of us.

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Taken from the same spot.

Saturday morning was spent getting the chipper working. We went over and brought the chipper back home with us. Jim found the problem and fixed it and we were ready to chip.

After lunch, the three of us met up at Moms and got to work.

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End of day Saturday.

Lots of dragging and chipping and raking.

On Sunday, Jim and I went back to deal with the logs. They were about 55 feet long and we decided to cut them into 8 foot lengths. We loaded the smaller ones first since at the site we could use the skidsteer to load the trailer but once we got them home we had to use our already sore muscles to get them unloaded.

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Loading the trailer with pine logs.

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Ready to go.

Once we got home with the second heavier load, we unhooked the trailer and went to get the skidsteer.

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Heavy load.

Then it was time to get these logs off the trailer.

logs,trailer
Taking off the straps.

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Lots of pine lumber in our future.

One final look at the completed job. Took one full day plus two afternoons with Daves help.

pine trees
All done!!!

Log ends are now painted.

logging,sawmilling,forestry,landscaping,sawyers,sawmillers,Nova Scotia
logs painted to help with drying

Thankfully today is a holiday. I think we need a little break.

Later

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