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nepia

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Everything posted by nepia

  1. ..and quite likely a successful business. People don't mind waiting for you if you let them know. If you say you'll call them in the next week do so. If you're going to be late for an appointment let them know. Simple things that all come under the umbrella of communication and if you do it well it pays dividends. Good luck Luke!
  2. Mine needs to be dayglo with a homing beacon. I've left it in several places; I once did a hairy dash back to the green waste site to excavate it before it went through the shredder. Old age coming on I expect...
  3. I would have thought a mimosa mimosa, not an acacia mimosa, with those fine leaflets. Shall we move on?!
  4. Do we have to say which Mimosa?! There are a lot of them...
  5. nepia

    sawhorse

    I'm using a 20" bar on my 064. That's about the maximum; any more and you risk hitting the rear framework. The station will work best with all of an 18" bar; 16" just isn't quite enough if you load it right up (the depth of stacked wood increases towards the top). Think carefully about what log size or sizes you want to produce as Laurie - the maker - will ask; he makes them to order, he doesn't have a barn of them ready and waiting. I say 'sizes' as, for example, it's easy to cut both 12" and 8" logs using 12" spacings of the uprights. You need to have your wits about you re the maths but it works. Any more q's please ask. I'm cutting all of my firewood using one now, usually hung on the tailgate of the pickup as per the bottom of page 1 here... http://arbtalk.co.uk/forum/firewood-forum/33895-oregon-easycut-sawhorse-review.html Where are you? Jon
  6. Got a 20" for the 064, which gets used mostly for firewood but it's done some chogging too. No problems at all; slips out of a slight pinch more easily than other bars or am I just trying to justify it? Jon
  7. They're admirable trees them olive things. Here are some more if you struggle sleeping sometime. http://www.dropbox.com/sh/svl666o84yeiter/tb4LSyNZN2
  8. Easy: that's Hot Arb Chick. Did she ever come back to us?! Darn - where's the picture gone?
  9. When you have my level of expertise David you live by the axiom that if you throw enough you-know-what against a wall some will stick. All those trees were within 10 minutes walk of the house; imagine what more spectacular specimens are out there. Harvest is in full swing but they had devastating rain on two consecutive nights some weeks ago and a lot of erosion was done. It's illegal to plough the groves now but does that make any difference in Spain?! Countless acres of almost lifeless monoculture...
  10. Something a bit different: gnarly olive trees in Andalucia last week. Take a deep breath - there are 37 pics! http://www.dropbox.com/sh/svl666o84yeiter/tb4LSyNZN2
  11. Wow - the strength of that beast must be immense. Incredible musculature. Merry Xmas.
  12. As face cord says the Fiskars are cracking though I have to say I only have the bypass ones but with the same gearing mechanism. I also have Bahco bypass loppers and they last years. I think most people go for bypass over anvil because the gardening literature tells them that anvils damage the tissue more than bypass ones so you will probably find less experience of anvils. Can I ask why you're so fussy about the finish - it is hazel after all - ? For cosmetic reasons?
  13. Luke, I've got a 32 and a 16. The first time I used the 16 on a (small) stump the shear pin went; the only time I've used it since was to tension a lightweight zipline. I'm glad it's not just me that finds stumping hard work; it's the hardest thing I do but the 32 is a must for that job. And I've pulled on a couple of 12" stumps that I had to double up on even with it. That all said I wouldn't be without it; Tirfors are great. Have a good Crimble. Jon
  14. Is the Navidale Estate too far? For that quantity I wouldn't have thought so. Worth a try?
  15. Depends on your situation I guess; for yours you're probably right. Being tiny time (one down from small time) I split everything that's too big to leave in the round. But I probably have the luxury of time that you don't. So the short answer to your question is maybe! For commercial scale production probably yes.
  16. Here you go mate. Enter the full Latin name - Search - 3 records - X suppliers - nursery/ies listed - Robert's your mother's brother. Genera results > RHS Plant Finder / RHS Gardening
  17. Ta for that Alex; you've just solved this year's 'what does Dad want for Christmas?' problem. Jon
  18. Do you have any private schools near you? Some of them publish small magazines/newsletters with ads in them. I have a large such school close; the mag is e-mailed to over 1000 e-mail addresses, mostly owned by fairly local well off families.
  19. It'll be on i-player from last Sunday's Countryfile.
  20. nepia

    sawhorse

    Not 'few £s' but a good investment: Joce Metal t/a The Irony O'it - Buckingham Woodstation The current versions are better than in the video and can be tailormade for your chosen log length.
  21. TCD; I think... the early pic of criss cross stacking of oak billets sacrifices space in the name of fast seasoning but re the later pic where criss cross stacking is only at the end of the pile - that's just an end stop to hold the straight stacked stuff in place. You see it all over the Alpine region where they stack loooong piles of softwood billets. Then again I may have got the wrong end of your stick completely! Jon
  22. Not a lot, no if you count a 2' log as a billet! I really try to avoid single logs at the outset to keep the handling down but some are inevitable. Jon
  23. Sorry, I meant 'stack parallel' - wasn't having a dig at what's really a thing of beauty. But 6 months for oak... I was right about the quick turnaround.
  24. Show off! But I guess quick turnaround means everything to you otherwise you'd stack them straight surely...?
  25. No confirmation e-mails which means FAILED. Must try harder. Here we go...

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