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nice colour - euonymous alatus?
- Today
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Phil Chap joined the community
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arborline tree care started following Stein Arbor Trolley
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Mark J started following Autumn colours
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Recently lost a troubled cousin who was at Toscaig out on Wester Ross. I've enjoyed the sales stuff I did in Scotland and the places it took me but it can be bleak and wild and I dont think that helped her or her family.
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Not sure on that bud, 162 and 156 are great saws. Always found the 346 a bit flat, it'd scream the knackers off but not do much . What model was the efco you brought ?
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Bit the bullet and got a proper Hitch climber pulley. Bit of an upgrade from the singing rock POS that was before Initial impression, I likeeeee
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sime42 started following Large betula pendula
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WillPlaskitt joined the community
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I bought a second hand Efco several years back just as a stop gap as Spud was porting my 346 . It was ok actually , better than I expected but not that good ! Sold it a few weeks later for a bit more than I paid for it so in that respect it was " that " good ! 🙂
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Interesting old thread. If anything the big 2 have tightened their stranglehold on the saw market. Despite a lot of the talk from 11 years ago. Only the echo 2511 gets a place on the trucks of pros. Battery saws may well change that though.
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Morning all, Going back to Glasgow today, home tomorrow. Just waiting for the ferry at present. It is so beautiful up here, have really enjoyed it.
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Wouldn't wipe the floor with the 156 or 162 efco
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Good start I’d say. Groundsman or DIY rigging? Where’s the best drop zone?And estimate how many cuts to piece it out below the orange line. I’ll do a sketch in a bit.
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Of course but not in hay fields. Silage I'm not sure about, whether the toxin survives the pickling
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Thanks for spotting that, I was looking at a related fungi and got the name mixed up, the two birch fungi have the betulina family name. Green would be my anchor points and top those first. Orang eline is roughtly where I'd reduce to if keeping it. Everything above orange line as one peice tops. Secondary rigging point on main stem and primary on each stem at roughtly the hieght shown. Everything below orange I could peice out, if removing it.
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The switch to Aspen Fuel has transformed operations for the Cowdray Estate forestry team– delivering significant health, safety and efficiency benefits to maintenance works across the 6,800 acres of managed woodland. Cowdray’s decision to start using Aspen two years ago has brought tangible benefits to both daily working conditions and long-term equipment performance. Assistant Forestry Manager Kris Gillespie has worked at Cowdray for the last seven years and is part of an 11-strong team looking after the maintenance of the conifers, broadleaf high forest and chestnut coppice that make up 36% of the total footprint of the estate. “Anyone who works with petrol-powered equipment will know that one of the major downsides is the fumes, and the implications this has for operator health and safety” Kris explains. “Even if you’re not actually using the tools, simply transporting cans from one place to another is enough to notice the smell.” “As soon as we started using Aspen, this all changed. The fact that it’s odourless in operation not only brings real health benefits for the team, it is also really beneficial for the visitors who regularly use the 100 miles of footpaths that run through our woodlands.” Aspen is an alkylate petrol, available for two and four stroke engines. Aspen 2 is pre-mixed with a fully synthetic, biodegradable oil removing the need to manual mixing and improving consistency and engine performance. Kris continues, “Not only has Aspen presented us with a cleaner, safer alternative, it’s also brought us efficiency savings by having Aspen delivered to site by the pallet – eliminating trips to the petrol station.” The absence of ethanol and other hazardous hydrocarbons has also been a gamechanger. “With a range of tools of all shapes and sizes, it’s not unusual for some machines to sit unused for a year or two at a time. Because Aspen is ethanol-free it doesn’t degrade like traditional petrol which means we can take a saw that hasn’t been used for a while, start it up and get straight to work.” He adds, “Before, we’d be spending money on repairs to machines which had barely clocked up any hours, just because of rotten fuel lines. That hasn’t happened since we started using Aspen fuel.” The Cowdray team has also adopted Aspen’s Fillpartner Combihandle, bringing further practicality and safety into practice. “With this, we can ensure no spills and quickly and easy swap out the Aspen can with a spare when required to get through a full day’s work with ease.”
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Derk joined the community
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Call before to agree drop off can be dropped on drive
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Wordle 1,573 5/6 ⬜⬜🟨🟨⬜ 🟨🟩⬜⬜🟩 ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Wood-drop-off joined the community
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Wordle 1,573 6/6 ⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛ 🟨🟨⬛⬛⬛ 🟨🟩⬛⬛⬛ ⬛🟩⬛🟩⬛ ⬛🟩⬛🟩⬛ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Watch: Tiny dog chases bear out of its Vancouver home WWW.BBC.CO.UK The dog's owner wrote on TikTok that the bear broke into her home and was eating her dog's food before Scout discovered... Who needs a Rottweiler? Just get one of these little fluffy rats.
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Wordle 1,573 5/6* 🟨🟩⬜⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟩⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟩⬜⬜ 🟩🟩🟩⬜🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩