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Posted
15 hours ago, DanBous said:

 

Are dead elms ok to climb? Brittle? Or really solid?!

They aren't huge, about 300 to 400mm across the bottom. Just quite close to a road so they can't be felled....

 

 

get lumps that size to a woodturner...

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Posted

Climbed tons of dead elms.  Everythings already been covered really.  Watch out for the roots, and note that its a bugger to spike in.  I had my only ever fall when spiking on a biggish dead elm.  Nothing major, just gaffed our and slid about 6ft down the trunk scuffing up my chest.

Posted

Have done a few big elms , not many or in the league as my father ... can either be rock hard and solid or a pithy mess that breaks up when you fart on it, some times both and have had a few catch me out either felling or dismantling.

Just go steady and read the tree.. it does work nice on the hinge as been said !

 

  • Haha 1
Posted

Matty has a good point, a lot depends on how dead.

The middles always go before the sapwood, irrespective of the state of the bark.

I would normally say bin the throwline and spike from the bottom so you can feel how sound the tree is.

The thing is, a lot of dead elms we have done have been swamped in ivy, so the throwline is quicker....

Never climbed a big one though, 60’ to the tips would be the biggest.

The lads on 3-strand dealt with the monsters 30 years ago.

Thank fuck.

Posted (edited)

Move up here mark plenty of big dead ones left.

Put hairs on your chest or take them off in steve's case

Edited by htb
  • Like 2
Posted

This one I had to dismantle to a stick to fit in a gap. I remember trying to swing a limb around rigging over a wall .. the limb started folding over nicely then just crumbled up and most dropped straight down before swinging .. going through dry stone wall! And leaving a 1ft section hanging on the rigging line... rest of the tree up until that point had been as hard as nails !
IMG_3933.jpg
Since or before I’ve never had that happen on a dead tree and I would of least expected it to happen on elm!
Watch them felling too! IMG_3936.jpg

  • Like 3
Posted

put a plunge cut straight into the trunk about 3ft up, this will give you an indication of the state of the timber....from good, to running out like a tap....stinky black goo!

 

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