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Dan Maynard

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Everything posted by Dan Maynard

  1. Yes, you can buy stump killer poison in DIY stores. May not work the first time. The best way is a stump grinder, hedge roots are really easy to grind even with a pedestrian grinder and if they're gone they don't grow well . Otherwise mini digger on hire but then you have a huge pile of roots to deal with/burn.
  2. That is cool, could also go in the remarkable trees thread.
  3. Ivy is a pain in the backside that's really hard to estimate, do you think they'd take working on an hourly rate? On the other hand it's all good experience, don't sweat too much about the price. Some you win some you lose.
  4. It does say "premium suv" Blimey though, forty grand!
  5. Any of the above really, keep cutting it back to ground level every ten or so years and enjoy the firewood. No need to let it grow to an unmanageable size.
  6. I would saw all the stems off just below where the break occurred, it will sprout back straight.
  7. Trouble with these is knowing someone to sell it to, I was asked the other day about wood for turning so maybe I'd keep a bit for them. Otherwise you find wood turners are always keen to have wood but maybe not so keen to pay enough to cover the time it takes to process and deliver it.
  8. There's a theoretical advantage of reduced load at the rigging point, I don't think you should be close enough to breaking the rigging point for this to be real though. Maybe it makes everything run smoother. In my area there's a lot of small trees in small drop zones, so I carry spidersling with arboring in my climbing kit as a general light rigging device - dead easy to set, no need for bollard, easy to move around to the best position as you go. It gives the equivalent of say half a wrap of friction on a bollard, so in a removal you can rig all the branches and light wood off using it. It's only real disadvantage is that it's hard to pull limbs back up. When the groundie pulls down it adds friction, so sometimes I end up pulling up on the up rope to help. Maybe also rings are not midline attachable but pulleys are. I don't find this too important though.
  9. Did it look smaller in the picture when you ordered it? You'll have to set a block first to get a hauling line to bring that up the tree!
  10. I was looking for an ascender to go on my spikes and didn't really resolve that. Not absolutely sure this is the one I saw but here https://skylandequipment.com/collections/husqvarna-t540i-xp-spare-parts/products/husqvarna-battery-kit-bli200x I guess if Husqvarna do it then any dealer could order the part though?
  11. And you got a photo there so you know you weren't seeing things later. Good plan.
  12. You can wash the ropes too, I don't use the washing machine for this but lots of people do. Maybe put it all in a pile on the lawn and hose down would be good enough? I guess hard to quantify the risk and thus know what is appropriate level of decontamination. How long do any pathogens survive in the faeces?
  13. I was sure it had dropped to 198.9 when I passed in the morning so I went back on the way home. Maybe I was seeing things but back to 199.9 anyway.
  14. Browsing around arb suppliers the other day, somewhere was advertising replacement husky battery boxes. If I remember where I'll add it here. Think around £30?
  15. Maybe there's a "most notifications" badge in the offing?
  16. Hard to see how wedged it is, but the other option to pulling the butt away with the winch is to create some rolling action that may bring it down. Can either wrap sling around the stem and pull to the side, or throw line a rope in higher up. Also, don't want to state the obvious but worth reading up on where not to stand during winch operations, especially if using redirect block
  17. I would have thought the neighbours are quite welcome to kill any roots that cross the boundary. Glyphosate is going to be a lot cheaper than solicitors though.
  18. Nobody suggested popping to Costa? Deliveroo? Have worked with one chap who would call them up if he'd done a private job at the weekend as feeling flush.
  19. Surely quick check on tank pressure is open the filler lid? Does this stop the dripping? Definitely had saws that don't want to restart when too hot, let tank pressure out and off they go.
  20. Secondhand, still possible previous owner had problems in hot weather and that's why they sold it.
  21. We had loads of wood that dad called macrocarpa after the 87 storms. Used to crack and spit chunks out of the fire so had a guard up, would be ok in a woodburner. I'd say somewhat similar to leylandii, slightly more orangey colour.
  22. I don't think I could be doing with separate coffee, milk powder etc as not always in my own truck. I usually make the coffee into the flask, there is a brown layer inside it to be fair but I reckon that just adds to the flavour. Once in a blue moon it gets a dose of Miltons, no aftertaste with that.
  23. Just thinking if you're selling it to a Vat registered firm they don't care if you do put vat on, so not really a hit to take.
  24. Also, it's possible but far from given that they will interfere with your foundations. Tree roots are relatively shallow so if you have foundations they will very likely be deeper. This makes it a hard case to prove, so not a strong argument from the TPO point of view.
  25. I clicked through, I don't think you can use that VAT margin scheme. There are specific rules for secondhand vehicles and they don't apply if you have paid VAT on the vehicle when you bought it. https://www.gov.uk/guidance/using-the-vat-margin-scheme-for-second-hand-vehicles When you say conflicting information from two different people, were they both accountants?

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