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Posted

Right then, time to settle it once and for all.

You lot know who you are โ€” the ones who treat stump grinders like fine instruments, not sledgehammers. Letโ€™s see your proudest work: clean removals, tricky roots, tight-access jobs.

And for balanceโ€ฆ letโ€™s have a few snaps of the other kind too. Machines misused. Roots half-done. Jobs bodged by someone who thinks 361s and mini diggers are the same game.

Pros vs posers โ€” let the people decide ๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ”ฅ

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Posted

Just to add a bit of spice to this โ€” itโ€™s mad how many of the so-called "experts" out there seem to have swapped rakes for chainsaws overnight.

One minute theyโ€™re cutting fairways on a golf course, next minute theyโ€™re bidding for full takedowns and grinding stumps like theyโ€™ve done their 10,000 hours.

I started in the woods at 12 years old โ€” actual forest work, not hedge-trimming in suburbia. Precision felling next to live power lines, working terrain most of these lads wouldnโ€™t drive through.

This game isnโ€™t just gear and a logo on a van. Itโ€™s feel, itโ€™s skill, and itโ€™s earned.

Anyway, keep the pics coming โ€” the good, the bad, and the downright banana ๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ”ฅ

Posted
8 minutes ago, Joe Newton said:

Nobody cares. Stump grinding is easy.

Haha, cheers Joe โ€” you're not wrong that bad stump grinding can look easyโ€ฆ

Itโ€™s just dropping a wheel and spinning it about, right?

But anyone whoโ€™s been on a hill, tight access, near services, or grinding a concrete-infused nightmare of a poplar root ball knows itโ€™s a different beast.

Real operators make it look easy โ€” thatโ€™s the trick. Same way a good climber makes a 60ft dismantle look like a stroll.

But hey, if you ever fancy a go on a 50hp tracked grinder down a zigzag alleyway with dogs barking and a patio 2 inches away โ€” Iโ€™ll keep a banana suit ready for ya ๐ŸŒ๐Ÿ˜‰

Posted

So far, this thread has done nothing to change my opinion that the best thing to do with a stump is to ignore it and walk away. But it's early days yet I suppose.ย 

Posted
5 minutes ago, peds said:

So far, this thread has done nothing to change my opinion that the best thing to do with a stump is to ignore it and walk away. But it's early days yet I suppose.ย 

ย 

Posted
7 minutes ago, peds said:

So far, this thread has done nothing to change my opinion that the best thing to do with a stump is to ignore it and walk away. But it's early days yet I suppose.ย 

Yeah mate, absolutely โ€” best thing to do with a stump is walk away. Maybe give it a little wave and whisper โ€œgood luckโ€ as it starts sprouting back through the lawn.

Clients love that. Real professional touch. Nothing screams โ€œI know treesโ€ like leaving half of it rotting in the ground.

Must be nice, doing half a job and calling it a day.

But hey โ€” not everyoneโ€™s built to handle machines, noise, dust, and real graft. Some folks were born to admire stumps from a safe distance. Youโ€™re doing your part.

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