I can barely remember a slipknot when I tie my horse 🤣🤣 I've used harnesses and bucket lifts but when they rig gear up I feel like I'd just screw it up and end up hanging from.my.big.toe lmao
The Guy in the Bucket Truck is Gifted, Beautifully balanced limbs, outstanding sawmanship , cool as a breeze, Crane operator is magic, Lee on the chipper is Cool as Ice Tea, Fast as Bruce Lee, You Guys are The Best of The Best !!!
I hope you’re doing ok Jacob from 🇬🇧 Loved the creative camera angles. The Best Arborist on You Tube to me, if not The BEST YOU TUBER - simply for your calm, kind, humble, polite nature, with fantastic manners, that goes down very well in England! Thank you for the videos mate 😊
Had lots of those Elms back in the day here in the upper Midwest. Still have a couple 20-25 years old on my place that sprouted from seeds. Some city streets were line with them years ago, it was like driving down a leaf enclosed tunnel in the summertime.Shame the havoc Dutch Elm caused to all those wonderful trees.
Truly massive tree. It’s really a shame that we are losing these trees, Ash, pine, and elm. At least Penn State is making progress on a disease resistant species. Hopefully for the future they will rebound. Thanks Jake for the ride along.
Great video. That whole team is amazing, how they each are really good at each of their task. That crane operator is on another level, such a smooth picks wow.
Their operation is "a cut above" most. Very impressive, highly skilled workers and great equipment. They were even careful not to damage the lawn and cleaned everything up at the end.
Shocked that you even found an Elm still standing. Here in New England we lost almost all Elms to Dutch Elm Disease in the '60s. Long gone. I recently had some tree work done and the operator of the tree "disassembler" was surprised that one of the trees was a "Water Elm", a rare breed of Elm that was resilient to the disease.
As a homeowner myself , I wondered how much it cost to take down that huge old tree. Keeping in mind they used some of the best heavy equipment available and experienced men for this job. Wow it was a wonderful job well done!
For not bring able to hear communication between operator and cutter I could tell they are well oiled! Perfect pretension, fast cuts, and balanced picks. Smooth! Very nice!
West coast man impressed by east coast tree company. That was a large ass chipper. And I agree the whole operation, company etc. is impressive. Good video. Thanks.
Man these are badass. I just recently bought my first house in 5 acres and needed a saw to do what I need to. Being a bastard I learn everything as I go so it went from tutorial videos to "who wants to let me come work for them on a "work cation" lmao I love farming but this is my next big interest I went out and cut down a 2 foot (I know small) hedge but the funnest part was seeing the tree do exactly what I wanted by using rhe exact methods taught on this channel. Don't stop making these my.guy
The guy in the bucket could definitely rig. Every time the cut was done the piece moved straight up --- beautiful. It's not every day the ground man does the last cut, but whatever.
Elms were known as a “Stately Tree! Most towns in the Northeast, left the big Elms and Maples, for the massive amount of shade they created! Whenever a gathering happened “in-town”, everybody sat under the Elms to listen to the politicians, giving you a “Stately Tree”. That one is a beast, shade for a hundred people or so, maybe more!!!
As a child back in the 1960s I lived on a street in Kansas City Missouri that was lined with several dozen Elms that were as big as that one. In the summer time the canopy over the street was like traveling through a tunnel. All of those trees succumbed to Dutch Elm Disease in the 1970s.
I love the fact the that was rigging and cutting nailed the rigging and made straight cuts with the saw and everything came off like it should. Great Crain operator to! Very easy to watch. Great job everyone.
the beauty of doing tree work in these towns with alot of homes is most times you can get a bucket positioned sumplace without having to climb..that dude did an awesome job setting those slings....perfect on everyone...jacob,,they dont need climbers lol..
Tough day on the job Jacob. Flying drones, chatting and doing an occasional cut. Don't blame you though. Gnarly tree and amazingly competent crew. Hope you bought lunch..
My dad cut elms in the late 60's and early 70's in Ontario. Gov't offered farmers $5 a tree to fell up to 100 trees. Dad charged $1 a tree just to fell. He had several saws but my favorite was the 2 cylinder Disston Mercury 2 man. I remember being on the dumb end of the 5' bar and cutting an elm that was wider than the bar. Had to use hand signals to communicate with him on the other side. Great experience in my youth.
Brings back memories in our woodlot when I was a teen. An Elm with no top branches would not come down so I had to leave till the next windstorm. That was irresponsible but it was in the middle of 50 acres!
I would have thought the owner would have chosen to leave about 10-15 feet or more of the main trunk and have someone do a chainsaw carving! Great work Jake! Really clean operation!!
And pay more money to an artisan, whose work may not be appreciated by others, the eventual artwork being demolished? I don't think the homeowner was in that mindset. 'Get rid of that deceased tree before it does any damage' is more like it.
In NL, sick trees have to be chipped, or burnt, so the beetles cant nest. The beetles spread the fungus that is Dutch Elms disease. Didnt originate here, but came over from east Asia. And from Europe jumped to the US. There's quite some Elms planted here and recommended is to grow them from seed, instead of clones, to increase chance of mutation that brings resistance. Its also actively researched to create resistant trees. And existing trees that are very old are treated with anti fungal compounds to keep them free of disease.
That'a really impressive. They have all the equipment to cut down that humongous elm. That chipper is way cool. The rigging and the picking was the smoothest I have ever seen. The crane operator was impressive. Great video.
I take it it was a one day job cuz towards the end of the video the guy in the bucket said I'm hungry no pain no gain that is absolutely amazing to get that whole tree done like that and one day I guess if you have the equipment it can be done wow great job guys
I’m glad your back Jacob good to see you bud My comment before was Jed is likely building trees these with the lord these days.praying for his family your a friend any man would want.
That tree has branches like my red oaks in my backyard! When I tell someone that it took me a few hours to clean up a branch that fell because it was 24" at the base of the "branch". Hopefully you get to venture out closer to me in Va outside of DC. I have some trees for you to cut down!
You said you didn't think you could tell how good the crane operator was in the video, but you definitely could. He is crazy good at his job. When he lowered one of those first big limbs near the house and swung it over to the chipper I thought damn he is good.
Thats one hell of an Operation an Equipment These guys git going there damn Cool Video Liked and commented before i even watched IT ...keep IT Up Jakob and the Rest of the Crew 👌
There was an Elm tree in the backyard of a house in the southern area of my town that before it got sick - treated and saved but had to cut back some - that was twice the size of thus one - the trunk at chest high is 5.5ft diam. and 80ft tall, limb line width was over 90ft
dam that chipper is such a game changer, especially with the winch and grappler. and i must say i like how they do it very organized and professional top notch and good job with the Hazzard awareness again top notch
We have a giant tree between two trailer homes and it's stump is equal to a redwood sump size and we had a other states tree company come over and they said they don't have the machinery to handle it
Lol i live in north nj n seeing the trees hanging over houses n power lines is so normal to me but when ur mind is blown n it looks normal to me its crazy to think washington doesnt have tht at all n i didnt even notice watching ur earlier videos
You should see the monster a block away from me in Audubon NJ…. It’s right on rt 30 in Audubon NJ… It’s massive, I swear it’s atleast 10 feet around at the base
Sweet job always nice see u work with these guys. Although what I can't understand must be different in America but there is no way over here anything other than the skinny branches would end up in the chipper especially with the amount ground crew it would be bucked for firewood am guessing they must get more money for wood chips? Seems crazy to me chipping big wood like that when There is a guy standing who could be bucking as it's being fed in the chipper. 🤔👍🏴
Fun video. What happens to the woodchips when hauled away? And what happens to the too large for the chipper logs that are hauled away? Cheers, Scott (Norway)
Elms are known as a “stately tree”, because (well you can’t tell by this one) when this thing has leaves, (one leave is as big around as a dinner late) you won’t find a better shade tree out there!!! Colonial New England, left these massive elms so when there was an announcement or speech the whole town could listen and picnic in the shade of the “Noble Elms”! You could see a row of those shading out a lot of square yards, but in Maine we were hit hard in 1980’s, most died off but my town has one massive Elm on Church st. The owner of the lot has wanted it cut down for decades now because every fall the leaves are a bitch to rake up!!! The town reminds him they are very rare nowadays, so neighbors help him rake up every fall! The next town over Waterville is known as “Elm City” and my town 10 miles away, has the only elm tree in a 10 mile radius, that I know of!!!
We love the videos with Schreiner Tree Care🥰
These boys are pretty impressive, and so is all that equipment. 💪
I can barely remember a slipknot when I tie my horse 🤣🤣 I've used harnesses and bucket lifts but when they rig gear up I feel like I'd just screw it up and end up hanging from.my.big.toe lmao
@@sethkeith6698 l
The Guy in the Bucket Truck is Gifted, Beautifully balanced limbs, outstanding sawmanship , cool as a breeze, Crane operator is magic, Lee on the chipper is Cool as Ice Tea, Fast as Bruce Lee, You Guys are The Best of The Best !!!
"If it fits it chips"... The chipper operator is pretty awesome too. Great crew all around!
I hope you’re doing ok Jacob from 🇬🇧
Loved the creative camera angles.
The Best Arborist on You Tube to me, if not The BEST YOU TUBER - simply for your calm, kind, humble, polite nature, with fantastic manners, that goes down very well in England! Thank you for the videos mate 😊
Wow thank you!
I second this. Cheers UK feller from the Mountains of the US.
Had lots of those Elms back in the day here in the upper Midwest. Still have a couple 20-25 years old on my place that sprouted from seeds. Some city streets were line with them years ago, it was like driving down a leaf enclosed tunnel in the summertime.Shame the havoc Dutch Elm caused to all those wonderful trees.
what an operation and crew!
Man, that equipment is impressive! The skill of the operators is even more impressive.
Truly massive tree. It’s really a shame that we are losing these trees, Ash, pine, and elm. At least Penn State is making progress on a disease resistant species. Hopefully for the future they will rebound. Thanks Jake for the ride along.
Great team work! A tree that size.
Great video Jacob! Shreiner Tree Care is one slick company, very inpressive! I am glad you got to use your saw too!
Wow! Crew, equipment, and technique in superb harmony! 😅
It's always fun watching an expert working a crane with great precision and care - great job to all crew
Great video. Was interesting to see old mate tie the limbs with the cow hitch instead of the running bowline.
Bucket truck operator is an ace with balancing those elm stems. Impressed
Would love to see an instructional on how they did the rigging , I do bucket work and they don’t teach us how to rig like that
That's a beautiful historic Pennsylvania stone house. That's something you'll never see in Washington state.
Really caught my eye too...love the stone work.. English Tudors are my favorite!
What their are no masons in Washington state???
Stone masons, anyway!!!
Great crew! Nice equipment! Very safety minded.
Cannot tell what is more impressive .......the chipper or the operator😁very entertaining
It 's really impressive! And a huge tree and professional teamwork.
Great video. That whole team is amazing, how they each are really good at each of their task. That crane operator is on another level, such a smooth picks wow.
Their operation is "a cut above" most. Very impressive, highly skilled workers and great equipment. They were even careful not to damage the lawn and cleaned everything up at the end.
Shocked that you even found an Elm still standing. Here in New England we lost almost all Elms to Dutch Elm Disease in the '60s. Long gone.
I recently had some tree work done and the operator of the tree "disassembler" was surprised that one of the trees was a "Water Elm", a rare breed of Elm that was resilient to the disease.
Lots of them around blue hill and castine Maine due to injection by an arborist years ago
Samw here in central Illinois
As a homeowner myself , I wondered how much it cost to take down that huge old tree. Keeping in mind they used some of the best heavy equipment available and experienced men for this job. Wow it was a wonderful job well done!
For not bring able to hear communication between operator and cutter I could tell they are well oiled! Perfect pretension, fast cuts, and balanced picks. Smooth! Very nice!
I HAD to re-watch, what a beast of a tree and one heck of an operation and crew.
West coast man impressed by east coast tree company. That was a large ass chipper. And I agree the whole operation, company etc. is impressive. Good video. Thanks.
Man these are badass. I just recently bought my first house in 5 acres and needed a saw to do what I need to. Being a bastard I learn everything as I go so it went from tutorial videos to "who wants to let me come work for them on a "work cation" lmao I love farming but this is my next big interest I went out and cut down a 2 foot (I know small) hedge but the funnest part was seeing the tree do exactly what I wanted by using rhe exact methods taught on this channel. Don't stop making these my.guy
Top tier company. A pleasure to watch! Thank you for posting.
The guy in the bucket could definitely rig. Every time the cut was done the piece moved straight up --- beautiful. It's not every day the ground man does the last cut, but whatever.
These men are very good and the Crane Operator was impressive ( Dead Tree Hugger Man ) ty Ron Crane Operator
Elms were known as a “Stately Tree! Most towns in the Northeast, left the big Elms and Maples, for the massive amount of shade they created! Whenever a gathering happened “in-town”, everybody sat under the Elms to listen to the politicians, giving you a “Stately Tree”. That one is a beast, shade for a hundred people or so, maybe more!!!
What a tree!
Great job, a real coordinated effort from every aspect. Awesome camera shots.
Stay safe
Awesome tree cutting. Amazed by how clean their equipment is this shows me the company is very proud of their work. Great video 👍
As a child back in the 1960s I lived on a street in Kansas City Missouri that was lined with several dozen Elms that were as big as that one. In the summer time the canopy over the street was like traveling through a tunnel. All of those trees succumbed to Dutch Elm Disease in the 1970s.
That crew earned your LIKE today! Well Done Boyz!
I love the fact the that was rigging and cutting nailed the rigging and made straight cuts with the saw and everything came off like it should. Great Crain operator to! Very easy to watch. Great job everyone.
the beauty of doing tree work in these towns with alot of homes is most times you can get a bucket positioned sumplace without having to climb..that dude did an awesome job setting those slings....perfect on everyone...jacob,,they dont need climbers lol..
Tough day on the job Jacob. Flying drones, chatting and doing an occasional cut.
Don't blame you though. Gnarly tree and amazingly competent crew. Hope you bought lunch..
It is rare to see rigging, cutting, and picking as smooth and controlled as that.
My dad cut elms in the late 60's and early 70's in Ontario. Gov't offered farmers $5 a tree to fell up to 100 trees. Dad charged $1 a tree just to fell. He had several saws but my favorite was the 2 cylinder Disston Mercury 2 man. I remember being on the dumb end of the 5' bar and cutting an elm that was wider than the bar. Had to use hand signals to communicate with him on the other side. Great experience in my youth.
Anyone else running a small operation, taking on smaller jobs, etc. but get motivated watching this?
Always looks forward to your uploads dude 👍
I love you working out east! Different kind of beasts out here. Keep up the good work brother! Stay safe
The video I've been waiting for. Damn those elms, respectfully.
Outstanding job both the tree work and cameras. Enjoyed it all.
Brings back memories in our woodlot when I was a teen. An Elm with no top branches would not come down so I had to leave till the next windstorm. That was irresponsible but it was in the middle of 50 acres!
Wow those boys are like a machine!!! Nice Job .
I've never done crane work before, and it has always intimidated me. Maybe one day I'll give it a try. Great video as always
It's a welcome change to see more of the ground work
I would have thought the owner would have chosen to leave about 10-15 feet or more of the main trunk and have someone do a chainsaw carving! Great work Jake! Really clean operation!!
And pay more money to an artisan, whose work may not be appreciated by others, the eventual artwork being demolished? I don't think the homeowner was in that mindset. 'Get rid of that deceased tree before it does any damage' is more like it.
Maybe if the tree was a white oak...
that elm wood is junk. dutch elm ruins the wood. wouldnt last long if it was carved.
In NL, sick trees have to be chipped, or burnt, so the beetles cant nest.
The beetles spread the fungus that is Dutch Elms disease.
Didnt originate here, but came over from east Asia. And from Europe jumped to the US.
There's quite some Elms planted here and recommended is to grow them from seed, instead of clones, to increase chance of mutation that brings resistance.
Its also actively researched to create resistant trees. And existing trees that are very old are treated with anti fungal compounds to keep them free of disease.
That'a really impressive. They have all the equipment to cut down that humongous elm. That chipper is way cool. The rigging and the picking was the smoothest I have ever seen. The crane operator was impressive. Great video.
Awsome job, amazing shots, thanks for the video!
Wow, that was a big tree. Quite the operation they’ve got there. Classy organization.
Bless What an AWESOME 👏 tree company. Thanks 😊
Enjoyed the video. Huge Elm. Excellent rigging and crane work. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Great video Jake totally awesome. Looks like everybody knew what the heck was going on. Stay safe buddy
You did / produced another absolutely outstanding video my friend!!
Great crew and a well run operation!
I love your videos. Keep up the good work
This videoe was well produced and edited.
Pro grade everything....
Can imagine it getting any better than this.
Looks like the bucket is an XTpro from custom truck. They are by far the best!!!
Great video showcasing some pretty phenomenal talent..
I take it it was a one day job cuz towards the end of the video the guy in the bucket said I'm hungry no pain no gain that is absolutely amazing to get that whole tree done like that and one day I guess if you have the equipment it can be done wow great job guys
Really nice content. Your video and editing quality is second to none.
@Jake, hated seeing another victim of this plague. The symphony of tree 🌳 care specialists was sublime though.
🤘😎✌️
That crane operator has fire in his eyes. He's the kind of guy you want operating the crane.
Nice teamwork there and that bucket man really did some nice PRECISE cutting….well done👍👍!
Complete professionals in every aspect!
I’m glad your back Jacob good to see you bud My comment before was Jed is likely building trees these with the lord these days.praying for his family your a friend any man would want.
Impressive work! The downside is that it is a pity to see all that potential firewood being chipped. Such is life.
Great video!❤ A beautiful neighborhood.
Glad to see you working your craft. Still sad about Jed.
Entire Crew - Well Oiled Machine!!!
The guy in the bucket was spot on with his rigging, pretty impressive!
The trees out west may be huge. But only on the east coast are you needing a 661 to chunk a tree down.
Absolutely impressive!
Some amazing camera views, nice creativity dude. Keep up the great work!
That tree has branches like my red oaks in my backyard! When I tell someone that it took me a few hours to clean up a branch that fell because it was 24" at the base of the "branch".
Hopefully you get to venture out closer to me in Va outside of DC. I have some trees for you to cut down!
Amazing how gentle those huge pieces of wood come off after it’s cut through
Those were some clean picks! 👌
You said you didn't think you could tell how good the crane operator was in the video, but you definitely could. He is crazy good at his job. When he lowered one of those first big limbs near the house and swung it over to the chipper I thought damn he is good.
Thats one hell of an Operation an Equipment These guys git going there damn
Cool Video Liked and commented before i even watched IT ...keep IT Up Jakob and the Rest of the Crew 👌
There was an Elm tree in the backyard of a house in the southern area of my town that before it got sick - treated and saved but had to cut back some - that was twice the size of thus one - the trunk at chest high is 5.5ft diam. and 80ft tall, limb line width was over 90ft
dam that chipper is such a game changer, especially with the winch and grappler. and i must say i like how they do it very organized and professional top notch and good job with the Hazzard awareness again top notch
You made Brain cry Jake! Hearing you talk another crane operator like that :(
really spread out tree & dead - no wonder they wanted it gone. great video as usual
We have a giant tree between two trailer homes and it's stump is equal to a redwood sump size and we had a other states tree company come over and they said they don't have the machinery to handle it
Some great gear. Really feelin the flow'
A crazy dismantle job! 👍
Lol i live in north nj n seeing the trees hanging over houses n power lines is so normal to me but when ur mind is blown n it looks normal to me its crazy to think washington doesnt have tht at all n i didnt even notice watching ur earlier videos
Lovin the view from the chains. Not sure if grane operater can c it. But be a handy think in the cab. Thanx
You should see the monster a block away from me in Audubon NJ…. It’s right on rt 30 in Audubon NJ… It’s massive, I swear it’s atleast 10 feet around at the base
That was pure impressive to watch !
I enjoy watching you take down the big trees but as a woodturner, I keep craving some of those logs that get chipped LOL!
Stuart
Sweet job always nice see u work with these guys. Although what I can't understand must be different in America but there is no way over here anything other than the skinny branches would end up in the chipper especially with the amount ground crew it would be bucked for firewood am guessing they must get more money for wood chips? Seems crazy to me chipping big wood like that when There is a guy standing who could be bucking as it's being fed in the chipper. 🤔👍🏴
Unusual now that an Elm lived long enough to get that big!
They might as well get a grapple crane, you know how much that thing does. But killer setup with everything they got
Almost 500k!!
Great video! Great team work too. How much did that tree weigh? The crane must be able to tell you the weights right?
Fun video. What happens to the woodchips when hauled away? And what happens to the too large for the chipper logs that are hauled away? Cheers, Scott (Norway)
Elms are known as a “stately tree”, because (well you can’t tell by this one) when this thing has leaves, (one leave is as big around as a dinner late) you won’t find a better shade tree out there!!! Colonial New England, left these massive elms so when there was an announcement or speech the whole town could listen and picnic in the shade of the “Noble Elms”! You could see a row of those shading out a lot of square yards, but in Maine we were hit hard in 1980’s, most died off but my town has one massive Elm on Church st. The owner of the lot has wanted it cut down for decades now because every fall the leaves are a bitch to rake up!!! The town reminds him they are very rare nowadays, so neighbors help him rake up every fall! The next town over Waterville is known as “Elm City” and my town 10 miles away, has the only elm tree in a 10 mile radius, that I know of!!!