Today's Posts
Showing status updates, topics, adverts, blog entries, articles, News, reviews, fungi, knots, records, images, albums, products, events and Freelancer posted in for the last 2 days.
- Past hour
-
Look at Cormidi can’t fault mine just fits in transit
-
Ha, Ok fair enough I'll let you have that one.K
- Today
-
Call M Large, Alan will be able to help!
-
best way of removing tree and stumps
green heart replied to Hog a Log Hogson's topic in General chat
Not perhaps, what you might wish to hear: Maybe your first step might have been to control the Himalayan Balsam ( a scheduled Non-Native Invasive Species !), which were just starting to flower at the time your photos were taken (poss May/June, I'd suspect ?). Unfortunately, that horse has now bolted -which means : Any tracked or wheeled machinery used in your tree/stump removal, will directly and liberally disperse the Balsam seeds all around your site -and maybe elsewhere- ready to flower again next season...sorry! 😖 So, either get some advice from an experienced Invasive Weed control contractor, or wait until April 2026 before starting a programme of pulling/cutting/strimming the Himalayan Balsam plants -and only in September 2026 would your tree removal begin to start.. -
Ask on tree facebook. Then give it a few weeks for people to forget. Then ask if anyone has a second hand one to sell.
- 1 reply
-
- 1
-
-
Ex-Soldier (County Durham) looking at getting into Arb/Forestry
JAG63 replied to Ex-Sapper's topic in Employment
Hi, suspect you're past ELC or have already used it. You may have useful licenses as an ex Sapper that can be a quick win for a lot of potential employers, C1+E or better still C+E and have probably got plant experience/licenses with CS30/31 could make you really useful. If you have access to any funding TKF training do regular courses aimed at service leavers, Holmfirth so out of area for you. -
What you'll earn PAYE is a broad spectrum depending on the firm and what they value you at, but I've found that guys entering the industry as climbers nowadays are offered about £11 - £12 ph if they are green. £13+ if they have a few years experience or pick it up quick, show efficiency, interest and prove they are reliable, with a good work ethic etc. After that, team leader roles seem to average at about £14 -16 ph. London it's often more. The trouble is, you have to somehow prove that you're worth the firm giving you climbing jobs. Especially if there are several trainees eager to get any climbing they can. It is a lot safer, easier and quicker for the firm just to use the experienced climber whenever they can. I've seen guys go and get all their tickets, turn up first day bright eyed and bushy tailed, only to get slowly ground down by the prospect of only doing small trees for the next three years. In my opinion, PAYE jobs can be harder to progress in. Your climbing background will help you. But Arb can throw some major challenges your way. Add a chainsaw, -4°C, sideways rain that leaves you frozen to your core, 100ft in the air, wind that makes you question the structural integrity of the tree and a lot of weight and you can quickly find yourself in a whole lot of trouble. That aspect of the job definitely isn't for everyone. There will be times where you experience near misses and you'll begin to understand the risks involved. If I were you, in today's climate, I'd give myself three years. Year 1, I'd seek an employed gig. Get them to fund some tickets and work until you've gone past the payback clause that'll be in your contract. Year 2, I'd approach some domestic arb contractors to get some Subbing work as a groundie. As many firms as you need to get full time work. 3 days a week with them, 2 days a week with him etc etc. Learn the ropes as it were... tell them that you're keen to try climbing. Keep them sweet by turning up when you say you will, keep your attitude straight and get after your goals. But keep yourself booked up as much as you can. Firms that like having you on board will begin to offer whole blocks of time. Like 3 months of work 2 days a week etc. Then you can start to plan around that. (Arb can go quiet all of a sudden so be careful there...) Year 3, you'll know if you like it or not by then. If so, push harder for climbing, learn what you can online, from books and through watching the more experienced guys. Start to think about how you can excel at the career. It's not all about knowing "what" you are doing up a tree, it's about knowing "why" You are doing it. Or some blokes come into the industry and decided they are happy chipping, cutting, working on the ground. There are too few like that because the money only starts to get better if you climb, or start out your own company.
-
Wordle 1,512 4/6 🟨🟨⬜⬜⬜ 🟨⬜🟨⬜🟨 ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
-
Hi all, The reason i'm writing a post is due to a disagreement with the neighbours regarding some trees and hedges in the garden. We're trying to solve it amicably but looking like it may go down the council route. I've asked the council for some guidance to help clarify how rulings would work in cases where a "hedge" is a mix of both Deciduous and Evergreen trees, and where the line would be drawn in cases where the hedge is quite long indeed. Unfortunately the council weren't able to give me a clear answer, so was hoping to get some advice on here aswell. I've done a crude MS paint image of the layout of the trees and hedges in question to help demonstrate the situation. In this case all trees and hedges belong to Property 4, and Property 2 and 3 have an issue (understandably we think) with the height of the Laurels and Confiers that are above 2M and overhanging the boundary of the land. I appreciate the .gov guidance states that for it to be considered a 'high hedge', it [i] is formed wholly or predominantly by a line of two or more evergreens. [/i] But the bit we're unclear on is; what about any deciduous trees that are part of this hedge too. In this case it is very likely mostly deciduous if you treat the whole hedge as one and i'd imagine a complaint wouldn't be upheld in this case? Or am I looking at this the wrong way? I.e is it possible for the complaint to be limited to the evergreen trees solely? (laurels and conifers) and leave the deciduous trees entirely excluded and untouched? If viewed this way then the 'hedge' is 100% evergreen.... and i'd imagine the complaint would be upheld? What do people think? can anyone shed some light on this (no pun intended :D) or have been through something similar themselves? Image below, for scale reference, the [i]depth [/i]of the Laurel is about 3Meters or so, cheers Ged
-
That's right, the wissey isn't connected to the broads, now if I'd have asked about river moorings close to/connected the Ouse he'd have been close.
-
UK passport database images used in facial recognition scans • The Register WWW.THEREGISTER.COM updated: Campaigners brand Home Office’s lack of transparency as ‘astonishing’ and ‘dangerous’
-
A belated morning everyone, stay safe and love what you do
-
Ercole Spada, father of aerodynamics in car design.
-
Rob 2025 is probably Robot 2025 .
-
Tree Planting Per Purchase and What About VAT?
jamies johnson replied to evelynemma's topic in Trees and the Law
Tree-planting services cost ~£1 per tree, and UK/EU providers may charge VAT. Record it as a business expense, and if VAT-registered, you can reclaim it. - Yesterday
-
Who got the other sets of cheap Sherpa tyres the other day then? I was going to buy them all but seemed rude when other people were wanting them. Long overdue. My current ones are bald as.
-
I have had a hard week this week so i let my pal do the final cut of the Ash tree. It`s great sometimes taking it easy.
-
- 1
-
-
39K views · 12K reactions | Crazy Football Contract Story The Boss's... WWW.FACEBOOK.COM Crazy Football Contract Story The Boss's Bizarre Demand!.
-
They do however facilitate 3/8 and 404 chains on the same bar with just a drive sprocket change. wouldn't be my first choice for milling though.
-
Just wondered if any of you turned up on site to find things were not quite as you expected. Last October went over to our wood to do some clearing to find Anglian Water on the Bridleway looking at a water main leak. The main is buried under one of our drainage ditches and runs right through the wood alongside a bridleway. Wasn't exactly straightforward as somebody had uttered the magic words 'Badgers' so they wouldn't do anything until conservation expert had had a look. It wasn't a badger set only a litte scrape under the concrete. Culvert ran at 90 degrees under bridleway at this point, so they again paniced saying maybe Badgers in there so I pointed ou highly unlikely as the water was pouring through it. They didn't see the major Badger Set 20 yards or so away! Anyway after a couple of days humming and hawing they finally decided to repair it. In fairness they did a good job and left it tidy, they even decided to reinstall the scrape under the concrete.
-
- 2
-
-
Something different. Bought a mower last autumn in excellent condition, hardly used less than half price of new, was on the Isle of Wight which is why nobody much was interested. Anyway rang dealer who said no problem can get it over to branch near Southampton which he did and threw in box of blades (50) foc. Picked it up on trailer then stuck it under cover. Unloaded it today using my old 384 no trouble lifted it up and then pulled trailer out from under. Took me back to my days as Cranes Engineer in the steelworks.