GitRDone
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andrew
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2020
- Threads
- 17
- Messages
- 446
- Reaction score
- 1,245
- Location
- Orlando Fl
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 XLT
- Occupation
- Real estate management
- Thread starter
- #16
Yeah, joke was funnier the first time but I get it. Nope, this live oak is 100+ years old and the trunk is as wide as my truck, so she ain't goin nowhere. I can tell what time of year it is by the deposits on my hood and trunk, but I love that tree.Actually the felling cut should be 1" - 2" above deepest point of the notch cut. I also cut the notch cut at least 40% into the trunk. The wedge does help, esp if the tree has any lean to it. But I always cut with the lean, unless there is something in the way. Then it is "prune to the trunk", and cut the trunk sections out until you are clear of the obstruction. Once clear drop what is left of the trunk in the natural lean direction. This is is what I was taught when I did this part time in my younger days. I dropped trees almost weekly for 10 years. When your full time job only pays $20K annually (northwestern Louisiana in the late 1970's), you do what it takes to pay the bills.
From tall skinny (3' diameter) pines to to large diameter water and pin oaks. Some of those old oak trees were so hard that the chain saw teeth would send sparks and dull very quickly. Many of the large oaks were massive at the ground, and the trunks were typically hollow in the middle.
Exhausting and dangerous work, but you slept well!
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