Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

RC0

Veteran Member
  • Posts

    1,629
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    5

Everything posted by RC0

  1. Especially liked the crane ride at the end. Well done:thumbup1:
  2. Good video, and work. I got to look at one the other day....quite a novel idea actually....and heavy duty also.
  3. Should be January, Martin. thanks
  4. I'd have soon run out if bar length with the top handle....but my rope wouldve still been off the ground. 550 is one a couple pounds heavier than the 540, but is 50 cc....so you do make much better progress cutting logs. I probably didn't need the 372 until I was down to about 160. I had a strap with micropulley already in mind to set above my head, so I could pull down on the climb line to raise the saw up into the tree.
  5. Long gaffs on that sort of old, mature tree. Some more footage from the job. One of the other climbers on site was Ryan Murphy....not to be mistaken for Gene Wilder:
  6. Thanks all. Tim, yes we avoided damage where possible. One of the reasons why I climbed so high to top that tree in the vid. 15ft logs there after. Didnt want to slam the bases of the adjacent trees. teepeat....creating habitat stumps in such an environment is pretty standard....and blasting does that perfectly it seems. Also, some of the trees were judged too dangerous to fall in a safe manner. Even trying to put a face cut in at ground level can result in the tree just sinking and trapping your saw. Then what ? Some of the dead trees they blasted were over 200ft. I personally wouldnt want to be strapped to a decayed monster at 40 ft cutting through it. Yeah Martin has a good setup Rich, wouldnt hesitate to work with him again. Mark, I was up there less than an hour and a half, so didnt need to clench that hard. SteveB, the 250 tree had a big head lean. From the ground it looked about the same as its neighbours....but upon getting up there it went way above. But still fair to say it was probably more like 235 with the lean....just 250 ft long judging by my rope length which was routed along the curvature of the tree. I copied and pasted something I wrote on another forum, regarding the second tree....gives you an idea as to how that unfolded....if anyones interested. I got some footage of it too, although I made the mistake of using the chestmount for the camera....it was rubbish. Hard to see anything the first few shots as a result, but you it does get better, and hope you get a sense of what I'd described. Well that was a shite day, guys. Rained throughout. I got 2 big ones done, and knocked out a couple smaller ones. First tall one was about 220 and pretty simple....second was more like 250....slight lean for about 150, and then took on a longbow shape for the remainder.....full of conks, looked like fommes pini. 0nly 15 ft from the highway, with the remaining 70/feet or so hanging over two other big ones. A truly nasty tree to be stood at the bottom looking up. What made it look all the more precarious is that it was only about four and a half feet DBH. You just know there s gonna be lots of movement up there. I decided to bypass all the branches to the very top....this way I could fold 20 ft section, rather than individual branches....which otherwise might drift down onto the road or get hung up in the other trees.....which were both 200+. We had flaggers on the road controling the cars, of which there were lots as its main highway. Consider also that they were dynamiting and falling trees further down the road.....so there'd soon be 50-100 cars each lane stopped at any one time.....and then all going at once, fast, in the rain When I eventually got to the top of that second tree and was ready to take a 15/ft top, blow and behold the radio wasn't working....it seemed I could hear them, but they couldn't hear me. And because of the height, the noise of traffic and saws, the rain....and the fact that I left all the branches on below, no ****** could see or hear me. Took me 25 minutes of yelling and waving before I finally caught someone's eye....and thankfully the understood the problem and anticipated what I was about to do. From there on I just folded the sections, stopping the traffic each time. Unreal amount if sway for the first few.....but not scary like you might expect, just slow and extended. I got it to about 140 ft, by which time the flaggers had gone and it was getting pretty dark. I'm soaking wet now too, as is all my gear. I did get some head cam, but not sure how good it'll be....maybe the first tree came out OK....but by the second one everything was wet through. I asked the kid who was assisting me from the ground to take some pictures.... But having lookd through them quickly, they mosly full of raindrops, or he shook the camera He's not definitely not a Roger Barnet. So I got one more day here tomorrow....although I think between myself and the other climber Ryan, the big climbs are done. Perhaps I can try to video some if the dynamiting tomorrow, which is just horrific when it goes off if you've never seen that before. But in regards to the well wishes and encouragement I got in the thread, thanks, I appreciate it. Although it should be pointed out there is nothing glamorous or remotely satisfying about a day like today. I had to be on the road at 5am to get here....then scrambling about in overextended, wet, mossy, wobbly firs. Hard work....even just having the weight of a wet 200/ft rope hanging 30/ft short of the ground below....and then that radio screwup and having to yell at the top if my voice for 25/mims....that about pushed me over the edge. So, yous missed nothing, really. The vid is Unlisted, so you need the link to find it in otherwords:
  7. 550, Ti. I got it for climbing, not much else. Stevie, a fair of big hazard trees came out over the last couple of days. Most of the footage I got was unwatcheble....because of the rain and sawdust etc. Root, heartrot and just stone dead like the second vid. The tree in the vid was pretty straightforward, just very tall. I topped out a big leaner that was probably 250, but the footage was rubbish as I used a chest mount for the camera....silly idea. They blew up some trees of similar size, but i wasnt able to film as was elsewhere in the grove. At least I got the one dynamite vid....be it a much shorter tree at 140. This was Martin Evans' job, a member here, from Coventry. Good bloke. Good treeman. A couple pics, although dark and and hard to see. Missed the tops coming off on both trees. Ah well. Rain throughout the first day....70-90k winds and rain the second day. Week before was beautiful, still and frosty. Murphys law:biggrin:
  8. Short clip topping a fir at over 200 ft. Followed an alternative method of topping in the second clip. Watch both in HD. Thanks
  9. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    Those logs I was cutting a face and leaving a very fine hinge. Step cuts....depends on whose up there and how big thing logs are. They do fall out further from the tree because the log pivoits on the corner of the stump, as opposed to where the hinge is set, so in that respect you don't get so much of a dip in the rope when the log tips over, which is not a bad thing. On the downside your accuracy can suffer with a big log which runs the risk of the log slamming the rigging line below the block. Like I said, it works, so long as you know your limitations.
  10. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    That's right mate, to keep the limbs elavated right until the end.
  11. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    I have 11 straps, w steel twistlock. They soon get used up on a tree like that but its still much quicker than using a haulback line. The guy running the ropes, Kim, is old school....uses trunk wraps mostly, climbs on a taut line hitch. He's totally solid and a meticulous worker and company owner, but sorta set in his ways. To be fair you don't get rattled quick so much with the polydine rope, and on a tall conifer....they seem to sway rather than shudder. Thanks
  12. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    Yeah I saw it. Not sure what inspired it, but it made me laugh nonetheless.
  13. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    The Husky has stood up well, Ian. Never missed a beat. Most of the logs were just rolled out of the way, 16in is standard firewood size here and almost every home owner want to keep it. We used the barrow just for the ones I had to rip....wasn't worth the AT, the barrow was just as good for those short pieces. Kev I don't worry about it. Its wool also, so I never need to wash it. Thanks
  14. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    Thanks. It was a full day, Adam
  15. Good job. Like everyone else, looking forward to seeing more.
  16. RC0

    Tall Fir Rigging

    They make quality stuff, whatever it be. That ones about 300 ft, so it needed a lot if milking. But I like it, yes. Thanks
  17. I mean proportionally tall, at 150, but only 3ft dbh. Lots of chunks to rig down....I got some on film. Stormy day, but a safe tree to climb. Use HD setting. Thanks
  18. Superp camera work and editing:thumbup1: Tree work wasnt bad either....
  19. I'll sleep on it. Its a good knife.
  20. Could've really used the THT today whilst rigging the top of a decayed Arbutus. In the past Id used to use a figure 8 to a similar effect....but what you have there looks much better. Good stuff mate
  21. RC0

    zip line @ 150 ft

    Thanks again. I managed with the 372 for as long as I could, then switched to the 3120 when the rounds had to be ripped....372 it too slow cutting into the wide, flat surface.
  22. RC0

    zip line @ 150 ft

    The guy on the ladder, that's Kim. Notorious for his wild optimism. He actually told me the tree was 95 foot beforehand. When we arrived the day of the job, he and I just laughed stood underneath. Bear in mind too is was raining, still dark and blowing hard....it was a grim feeling to put it mildly. I'll put some footage together of the removal soon enough. Thanks

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.