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John Shutler

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Everything posted by John Shutler

  1. not sure, that adress is the same as the one on his buissness card he gave me the day he came onto the site
  2. il get a copy of the letter from my dads office and post it here
  3. one of the things that annoys me is that the letter is so badly written,it is full of inacuracys and typos.he supposedly runs an accounting and buissness management firm,. does that strike you as aletter from a professional person it really pisses me of that he clearly thinks he can scare me into giving in and admitting liability because im half his age(im 25) ive been advisesd to include my insurance details in my solicitors letter but also to speak to the nfu and tell them what is going on. the state of the trees was appalling, should he not of had some duty of care to his tennants to make sure the trees were safe
  4. i have my own copy of the quote, and copys of payment in my invoice book
  5. the majority of the logs are back at my yard.
  6. thankfully my dad is a lawer and is dealing with the whole situation. my instinct was to phone him up and tell him what i thought of the little worm, but the old man assured me that was not the way to go.
  7. notes i made on the trees Job 1 Fell x3 Silver Birch (Betula pendula) T1) Silver Birch (Betula pendula). Large cavity with extensive decay at the base of the tree. Large amounts of dieback within the crown T2) Silver Birch (Betula pendula). Heavy lean towards car parking, with exposed roots and deep erosion of soil around root plate. Large sail area could lead to failure at root plate T3) Silver Birch (Betula pendula). Growing alongside Swedish Whitebeam (Sorbus intermedia). 2 co dominant stems with serious included bark at union. Leaning over driveway. Pronounced lean to 1 stem due to competition for light and dominancy with the Swedish Whitebeam. Job 2 Fell x1 Sessile Oak (Quercus petrea), x1 Beech (Fagus sylvatica), fell x1 small Common Holly (Ilex aquifolium). Clear various small Hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna) and self seeded Sessile oaks (Quercus petrea) ready for replanting by gardeners T1) Sessile Oak (Quercus petrea). Poor vigour due to competition from other trees for light, also possible root damage by earthworks and new fence within drip line. T2) Beech (Fagus sylvatica). Serious dieback with large spurs of deadwood. Obvious signs of damage to bark and Cambium layer. T3) Common Holly (Ilex aquifolium). Poor specimen. Obvious signs of “topping”
  8. a couple of months ago i felled some trees for a local well known lady at her house in the forest, half way into the job a man turned up claiming that he had been the owner for 5 years and i should stop work, which i did. she is a well known local lady andher name and the name of her buisness(collecting mushrooms from the new forest) is displayed at the end of her drive. when i phoned the tree helpline they knew it as her house to. how far should you go to find out if the person asking you to do the work is the owner.she paid me for the work. all the trees came out because of their poor condition
  9. bit of a derail, but how do you find having the swivel instead of just using the supplied ring
  10. no its samson arbormaster. the hitchcord is liros herkules. it is a satisfying combo. i have since gone back to using armor-prus though
  11. i quite like the idea of one of the orange ones ed mentioned on another thread. bet many people will cry out when i say i bought it over the 441
  12. hehe hoping it might catch on. running a 28in bar with no problems though
  13. the but sections went to robert dyer who has the alaskan mills at the arb shows, the main section had quite extensive decay though, all the rest is fire wood. i started climbing at 8 and was finished by 3 with a tea break and lunchbreak and went back the next day to fell the stem and sort it out for collection by farwells with the timber lorry all done by lunch. so a day and a half total. the guys on the ground were brilliant,having the digger and grain trailers sped things up as stuff could be dropped big and handled with the machinery.there was a fair bit of rigging, didnt want to damage the hedging below and the main gas pipeline that ran down one side
  14. yep, it was a shame. but as mentioned on an earlier thread there were many reasons why it came down, unfortunately i can only point out the defects in the tree and the associated risks. the decision to remove was not mine. but better i have the work than someone else
  15. doh. no i didnt.
  16. cheers for putting the link up
  17. yes these are the pics from the job about a month ago, it was felled, i did try to persuade the farmer to retain it as a monolith, it was by far the biggest oak on the farm and it was really sad to see it go. id previously deadwooded as it grew over the track to his neighbours house, and it had shed one large limb over the track
  18. last one
  19. some pics from a job a couple of weeks ago
  20. never thought of that
  21. and power cables

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