How To Perfectly Cut Down A Tree

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  • Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
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Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @dwaynemauk566
    @dwaynemauk566 Месяц назад +853

    Ive dropped hundreds of trees, and pretty good at putting it where I want, but that is the coolest trick I've ever seen.

    • @jimbergeron4592
      @jimbergeron4592 Месяц назад +6

      GOOD LOOK'IN FOR ALL YHE LOGGERS OUT THERE??🪵🛖⛺️

    • @TomRolfson
      @TomRolfson Месяц назад +10

      I'm with ya. I can usually drop up to 60' w/in 12-18" if aim. This guy is brilliant and I'll be trying his technique in the fall cutting season.

    • @ibrahimdiis4595
      @ibrahimdiis4595 Месяц назад +3

      STOP CUUTING TREES MAN

    • @dwaynemauk566
      @dwaynemauk566 Месяц назад +34

      @@ibrahimdiis4595 You stop living in a house made of wood, don't use furniture made of wood, etc and then we can stop cutting down trees. Trees are a resource, and if in the way, or dying, etc, their going to come down either by themselves or with some help.

    • @lawrencebeverly7062
      @lawrencebeverly7062 Месяц назад +1

      I agree. Dropped a few myself and never thought of this. Awesome huh?

  • @gmacka6333
    @gmacka6333 3 месяца назад +1034

    I gotta say, regardless of all the hate in the comments, that this was a pretty damn cool way to fall a tree. Definitely skilled

    • @elibooks7660
      @elibooks7660 2 месяца назад +11

      Nah
      It's math bro
      Doesn't matter how you cut it
      The weight of the three leaning side
      Sheesh

    • @jorgebenavides2391
      @jorgebenavides2391 2 месяца назад +2

      ❤❤❤❤❤

    • @rjmurphyo0
      @rjmurphyo0 2 месяца назад

      how about stop cutting down all the forests and leaving this planet nothing but a barron waste land. Destroying it!

    • @robertburcham7929
      @robertburcham7929 2 месяца назад +1

      ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @haldyordan2316
      @haldyordan2316 2 месяца назад

      ​@@elibooks7660many are brilliant in math but in actual, epic lazy, not all but many

  • @jobaytube
    @jobaytube Месяц назад +74

    that right there is an engineering mind.

    • @GearJamminHank
      @GearJamminHank 4 дня назад

      If you've every tried to remove a 3 inch bolt from 2 inches of soace in a cars engine bay, you'd know that exactly the opposite of a engineers mind. Because it worked. This is outside the box thinking.

  • @afiblacksails23
    @afiblacksails23 25 дней назад +45

    That’s definitely one of the best things I’ve seen, tree doesn’t buck or roll and falls perfectly where you need it.

  • @ianjones7740
    @ianjones7740 4 месяца назад +661

    Step one.
    Sharpen the chain.

    • @Dani-ku1gw
      @Dani-ku1gw 4 месяца назад +13

      Yep

    • @shawnfreeoftyranny8849
      @shawnfreeoftyranny8849 4 месяца назад +8

      If its to sharp you would have trouble plunging it in for those cuts .

    • @Dani-ku1gw
      @Dani-ku1gw 4 месяца назад +5

      @@shawnfreeoftyranny8849 ohh I didn't know that

    • @stever2583
      @stever2583 4 месяца назад +28

      @@shawnfreeoftyranny8849 Make sure you tell pro fallers that tidbit... I'm sure they'd love to use dull saws in the bush!

    • @shawnfreeoftyranny8849
      @shawnfreeoftyranny8849 4 месяца назад +15

      @@stever2583I was a top dog timber man there bud. I made my chains custom for diff. applications . Chains I made for logs are firewood, you would need hold the saw back. No pushing needed. You try putting one of those chains in there and ya be pullin the saw out your head . My choice worked saw was 064's that I tweak by ear and got pic.'s of me cutting with one in each hand . Used my 088' Stihl on the big timber I came across .

  • @MikkiandAngel
    @MikkiandAngel 2 месяца назад +483

    My husband was a legit tree faller in the woods he did that for many years. He’d say it’s a precision of art.

    • @user-vg6mj5eg3n
      @user-vg6mj5eg3n 2 месяца назад +7

      yes, not new. my uncle was shown how a d from then on we'd go wood choopping. the trees we cut and took for firewood were marked by forest rangers, not just randomly

    • @fixyjohnfixyjohn1735
      @fixyjohnfixyjohn1735 2 месяца назад +6

      Grow trees.... Instead...

    • @tooshady47446ttv
      @tooshady47446ttv 2 месяца назад +7

      Cutting down trees is not art tho it's devastating the planet at this point

    • @8FLIPPER8
      @8FLIPPER8 2 месяца назад +3

      I tried that once but the tree fell backwards because the owners had continually been cutting branches from the front side because it was overshadowing the pool that I did not pay attention to. In other words it does not always work.

    • @cardo718
      @cardo718 2 месяца назад

      ​@@tooshady47446ttv ignorant

  • @Zerpentsa6598
    @Zerpentsa6598 Месяц назад +19

    It also depends on whether the tree is leaning in one direction or not. If it leaned a lot to the north, you can't make it fall to the south whatever you cut. You need ropes.

    • @MrTTdawgTT
      @MrTTdawgTT 22 дня назад +1

      I’d always tie a rope to a big limb in the direction of fall (after I hacked off anything that made it lean wrong) and pull it tight. I’d cut 3/4 into the trunk a 45 deg wedge, and at the back come in about 2 ft above that cut and go almost straight down, so if it wanted to go backwards there was a big surfboard sticking out of the trunk.

    • @benjamindavis6535
      @benjamindavis6535 20 дней назад

      What a huge brain you have...

  • @uncaboat2399
    @uncaboat2399 2 месяца назад +8

    why is the narrator talking like this is the only guy on the planet who knows how to use this technique, as opposed to the reality that lumberjacks have been doing this for 100's of years?

    • @OUTLAWZee73
      @OUTLAWZee73 5 дней назад

      I can't see this going viral I have seen hundreds of the same technique.

  • @ptownrat3811
    @ptownrat3811 3 месяца назад +197

    Seen a guy fell a giant Tamarack in Idaho. He actually put out a beer can and said he'd crush it.
    He cut a wedge, then back cut it. The ground shook, and that can was crushed. Remarkable skill.

    • @karensimons9260
      @karensimons9260 3 месяца назад +14

      Fantastic! Nothing like a seasoned faller❤😊

    • @gordjohn2322
      @gordjohn2322 3 месяца назад +26

      @karensimons9260 Hello Karen. You may think this guy is a 'seasoned faller' as you called him, but I have worked doing exactly what he is doing. One winter Dad and I took out a little over a million board feet of lumber. I've never seen anyone that has done such work do all those crazy things this guy does. I guess this looks impressive to anyone that has never been a lumberjack. I sat here and listened to the narrator and shook my head in amazement at what I saw. This guy knows nothing about cutting down a tree.
      1) As other people have said, he needs to sharpen the chain.
      2) If he was working for me as a logger and cut down a tree like this, I'd immediately fire him.
      3) The ONLY thing he did right was to cut that notch or wedge, but even that was done wrong.
      4) You never make an over-cut but always make an under-cut. Over-cut means the top part of the notch is cut at an angle instead of cut horizontal. The angle part should be under the horizontal cut and angle up, leading to the name under-cut. If this tree was to be made into lumber, this guy wasted a lot of the best part of the tree, which is the lower part.
      5) Why is he making the cut so high above ground, again wasting a lot of good valuable lumber? All this should be as close to the ground as possible.
      6) I've never heard of cutting that long notch below the wedge, since as I said in #5, everything is cut as close to the ground as possible.
      7) There are several things to consider when deciding where the tree will fall, and to an extent that location can be influenced by the exact direction of that 'V' shaped wedge. Is the tree leaning a little one way or the other, is there a wind or breeze blowing, does one side have more branches than the other which will pull the falling tree that way because of their extra weight.
      8) That long vertical slit he made below the 'V' shaped wedge is suppose to not allow the falling tree to kick back or roll to one side. If you watch very careful as the tree is falling and that 'wedge' is closing, there is a moment when that long strip of wood is on top of the stump and not in the slit leading to the ground. At that moment, the tree would be free to kick back or roll off to one side. If it has many thick heavy branches, they will act as sort of a spring and even let the tree bounce a little. If you are standing to close and the tree hits you, you will either be on your way to a hospital or perhaps the morgue. When you are out there in the woods and working with equipment, you had better keep your mind on what you are doing. There are no second chances.
      Now Karen, after reading all this, doesn't it make you want to grab your hard-hat and come join me? :)

    • @kenguerrerosr2356
      @kenguerrerosr2356 3 месяца назад +3

      Timber.. 😮🔊🌴
      😅😂🤣😆

    • @alankerr8036
      @alankerr8036 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@gordjohn2322Thats just what I was going to say 😂😅😂

    • @Avengedsevenfoldrocks
      @Avengedsevenfoldrocks 3 месяца назад

      ​@@alankerr8036see; look at all the time you saved

  • @christrees8576
    @christrees8576 3 месяца назад +134

    The technique recommended in the Stihl manual looks the safest to me. Front notch aas here, cut central chamber,bang in a wedge or 2 then cut the back notch. The tree can only go the right way because of the wedges. Is some extra work, but I guess Stihl are quite motivated to avoid users of their saws dying.

    • @AxelOlsson-ks2gu
      @AxelOlsson-ks2gu 2 месяца назад +3

      Big Yawn.

    • @peternorton5648
      @peternorton5648 Месяц назад

      @@AxelOlsson-ks2gu spoken like an idiot who has never felled a tree in their life.

    • @panchopistola8298
      @panchopistola8298 Месяц назад +6

      @@AxelOlsson-ks2guYou set in front of your computer for 12 hours at least 5 days last week … so …

    • @jbbolts
      @jbbolts Месяц назад +5

      except it could still roll sideways after it falls this technique avoids that happening

    • @damondiehl5637
      @damondiehl5637 Месяц назад +3

      Mostly true. Wind still happens and if the tree is leaning badly, wedges aren't going to be enough. This is an edge case, where the tree has to fall in a certain place.

  • @areyoukittenme9937
    @areyoukittenme9937 28 дней назад +17

    As a person who had dropped massive trees.... this trick will only work with a chainsaw with a bar that's longer than the diameter of the tree..... I cut trees so huge my 25inch bar isn't long enough to plunge a notch through tree... I'm dropping trees 4 times that size....

    • @TakeHit0
      @TakeHit0 25 дней назад +2

      Couldn't you just work both sides? 😅

    • @jonathanfalkenberg6457
      @jonathanfalkenberg6457 25 дней назад

      ​@@TakeHit0 too much of a chance of missing the cut on the other side, plus he's probably a west coast logger cutting 100+ inch diameter trees, a 25 inch bar wouldn't reach through working both sides any way to try

    • @TakeHit0
      @TakeHit0 25 дней назад

      @@jonathanfalkenberg6457 geezuz 2.5m diameter

    • @jonathanfalkenberg6457
      @jonathanfalkenberg6457 25 дней назад

      @@TakeHit0 yeah they get some big trees on the Western Coast of the United States, 300 feet tall in some areas

    • @spanky541
      @spanky541 22 дня назад

      But trees that size are rarely being felled near homes and garages. They are being dropped in the forest and that means precise d roping is not nearly as critical.

  • @Tracyusa
    @Tracyusa Месяц назад +3

    That's bullshit. Do the big notch where you want it to follow. Then, at the back cut about 1 foot above the front cut at a 45-degree angle down. Tree falls within 6" every time. I've cut over 6,000 trees. If the tree is leaning different from where you want it to fall, you may need to put a wedge in the back after you cut in the tree far enough to hammer a wedge in behind you saw bar.

  • @DONTCALLMETHAT
    @DONTCALLMETHAT 4 месяца назад +292

    Living in the South, wood is big business. My dad cut trees for years and never did any more than cut a notch from the base as to what way he wanted the tree to fall. That technique never failed him. If the winds were high, he waited.

    • @blipblop92
      @blipblop92 4 месяца назад +9

      There is always a rope puller, the notch is not enough in most cases especially if the tree is well balanced

    • @DONTCALLMETHAT
      @DONTCALLMETHAT 4 месяца назад +14

      @@blipblop92 we only used the cable for trees that were leaning slightly and that was rare occasions. Other than that, the old man could put any tree wherever he wanted it to go.

    • @davinaneether5183
      @davinaneether5183 4 месяца назад +12

      I come from a family of loggers, first he needs to sharpen his chain, the method you describe is the tried and true method that loggers have used for years.

    • @ZeroTolerance-tk9ce
      @ZeroTolerance-tk9ce 4 месяца назад +12

      @@davinaneether5183My Dad and I cut timber in WV when I was just a kid. If you notch the tree properly and step away from it as it starts to fall you don't need all these fancy cuts. I know they can kick back or split or any number of crazy things but you're watching for that. I'm sure cutting a tree next to somebody's house is a different matter. My Dad could make a tree fall more or less in the direction he wanted but trees generally fall where they want to unless you're using ropes and such.

    • @hoenircanute
      @hoenircanute 3 месяца назад

      @@DONTCALLMETHAT My old man would fly around the tree and then cut it with his dikk.

  • @marchess923
    @marchess923 4 месяца назад +107

    You know a lot of guys panic about damaging a house. But when you stop and think about it, you have a lot of free lumber for the repairs.

    • @gordjohn2322
      @gordjohn2322 3 месяца назад +9

      @marchess923 Ha Ha You're funny. {:>) Not only that but now you can rebuild the house the way you always knew it should have been in the first place,

    • @zzgo-8472
      @zzgo-8472 2 месяца назад +1

      Nice!

    • @traversslattery4307
      @traversslattery4307 2 месяца назад +1

      Best comment ever lol genius bro

    • @doughesson
      @doughesson 2 месяца назад

      IF it's the same wood as used in the construction.

    • @rodschmidt8952
      @rodschmidt8952 2 месяца назад +1

      "But on the plus side, you now have a new log cabin!"

  • @debunkthejunk1
    @debunkthejunk1 Месяц назад +36

    Pro-tip - This helps but you still need to know where you center mass is. No amount of cuts is going to get 2 tons of mass to fall in a different direction than straight down. If the CM of that tree is 10 feet from the direction of that notch it's falling the other way. This technique is very smart but it only helps so much.

    • @scottpollock1714
      @scottpollock1714 Месяц назад +2

      Well sure, but before you do this you absolutely want to trim the tree if possible.

    • @RemnantTree
      @RemnantTree Месяц назад +2

      Pros don't call their tips 'Pro Tips'!😂

    • @jerrynance6404
      @jerrynance6404 Месяц назад +1

      I was thinking similar thoughts. And, I would tie a long cable up high on the tree. And, then hook it to a machine I could pull the tree the desired direction. Especially, with that house directly behind the tree. They might not appreciate the tree falling on their house. 😂😂😂 Once you get it started with the cable, it will drop approximately where you wanted it.
      I've cabled a tree over many times. Especially when it looked like the tree might be weighted a little the wrong way.
      Better safe than sorry, afterwards. 🙂

    • @debunkthejunk1
      @debunkthejunk1 Месяц назад

      @@RemnantTree Pro-tip - People that have been on the internet for a minute know what "pro-tips" are. 🤣

    • @debunkthejunk1
      @debunkthejunk1 Месяц назад

      @@jerrynance6404 Yah, even then you have to be careful of where the mass is. There's quite a few videos of trees yanking trucks off the ground cause they underestimate the mass and how much leverage there is. I think we could see some over confident people using this technique on a big tree and ending up with a really big sky light in their house. Time will tell.

  • @robertahubert9155
    @robertahubert9155 Месяц назад +8

    Cutting down trees is dangerous when you don't know what your doing. My Dad did this for a living. I love the smell of fresh cut trees

  • @Turco949
    @Turco949 2 месяца назад +27

    This is exactly how I have been cutting my Birthday cakes all these years!

  • @dalegreer3095
    @dalegreer3095 3 месяца назад +51

    A key notch cut is used when you don't want the butt of the tree to fall onto something, like a fence or a bush, or just something on the ground you don't want to crush. Also when you want to prevent the butt from rolling as it falls.

  • @pal6636
    @pal6636 2 месяца назад +65

    This may impress anyone who's never cut a tree..but he did what everyone does, but instead of safely standing behind the tree and using a wedge, he risks standing right infront of a tree that hes just weakened to fall towards him, then doing a " nose cut" with way more potential for kickback...and playing " jenga " . A pro thinking safety wouldnt do this . Pure novelty. Hes playing " jenga" instead of " kerplunk "

    • @DuvibdDuvusbudhd
      @DuvibdDuvusbudhd Месяц назад +13

      Tell me you never did this for a living without telling me

    • @rockygillman6404
      @rockygillman6404 Месяц назад +3

      He's literally to the side of the tree.

    • @usrnotfound1859
      @usrnotfound1859 Месяц назад +3

      Yes indeed. Shallow and pedantic.

    • @marcuscarrozza732
      @marcuscarrozza732 Месяц назад +2

      Your right bro . Don't met any tell you different. Safety is always first . But truthfully he should have started at the top of the tree and worked his way down to be safe for himself and the home or homes he is near .

    • @areyoukittenme9937
      @areyoukittenme9937 28 дней назад

      You aren't very observant..... if you watch the tree fall you will realize the top is cut ....... it's just a log about 15feet tall..... you can see shadow and you would hear a massive thud if the tree was whole..... next time observe before commenting

  • @DoUrden09
    @DoUrden09 Месяц назад +6

    I’ve seen this dozens of times. It’s everything but unique

  • @badguy5554
    @badguy5554 4 месяца назад +32

    Cutting that notch, in the direction one wants the tree to fall, then cutting a straight cut on the other side of the notch is the Standard Procedure for felling a tree.

    • @oblood189
      @oblood189 4 месяца назад +3

      U r absolutely right, nobody needs to ✂️ cut the hell out of the 🌳

    • @johnray5568
      @johnray5568 4 месяца назад

      I didn't realise that. I've seen so many clips of felling fails that I thought there was an element of luck to it . Thanks.

    • @user-qv1fm2vb9d
      @user-qv1fm2vb9d 4 месяца назад +3

      Maybe maybe not
      Tree sometimes have their own way

    • @badguy5554
      @badguy5554 4 месяца назад

      @@user-qv1fm2vb9d None that I ever cut down.

    • @markinvt
      @markinvt 4 месяца назад +3

      He didn't make a straight cut on the backside. If he had, he would have severed the tenon. He cut on the right side on an angle to the tenon, then came around to the left side and cut to the tenon. That's the "unique technique."

  • @whatananimal
    @whatananimal 25 дней назад +2

    I used this method to drop an oak tree in my back yard. I had a smaller area that would be safe to drop it into so used this notch cut. Works really well. There are many methods to drop trees accurately and this is one of them.

  • @rickcarson9423
    @rickcarson9423 Месяц назад +15

    Extra work that is not necessary. If you leave enough of a hinge on the backcut the tree will not swing. Looks cool, though.

  • @blu203
    @blu203 4 месяца назад +404

    Ive ben cutting for a long time never saw that. Seems like extra work to me

    • @donvincentwalters2705
      @donvincentwalters2705 4 месяца назад

      Fuckery. By the hour fuckery.

    • @chrissalter8342
      @chrissalter8342 4 месяца назад +72

      It is extra work but sure as hell prevents even more!

    • @tgh223
      @tgh223 4 месяца назад

      @@chrissalter8342 total waste of time

    • @Bloody_Murder
      @Bloody_Murder 4 месяца назад +15

      Yea it's pretty extra I did it on an oak about the same size just for fun and it worked well but definitely see why he used a pine tree. Saw doesn't like cutting against the grain especially an oak lol

    • @MelodyMan69
      @MelodyMan69 4 месяца назад +10

      Recon you have a "few" disasters in your history.

  • @m444ss
    @m444ss 4 месяца назад +277

    no chance I'm cutting a notch and then standing in front of that notch to cut below it.

    • @eivarden
      @eivarden 4 месяца назад +37

      I did think it odd he made that notch 1st.
      he should have cut out the vertical cuts and block 1st. THEN start the wedge

    • @hak3739
      @hak3739 4 месяца назад +7

      🎯🎯🎯🎯🎯🎯

    • @andrewr2650
      @andrewr2650 3 месяца назад +4

      I thought the exact same thing, and that tree was upright with the notch cut for way too long.

    • @omenaccipio
      @omenaccipio 3 месяца назад +2

      Bullseye!

    • @Robmancan1987
      @Robmancan1987 3 месяца назад +7

      These guys understand the physics of the tree. They're masters with tension and compression.

  • @StephenRiemann
    @StephenRiemann 2 месяца назад +1

    Everything was fake until bros inner child couldnt be contained, that was the realest thing this video had to offer

  • @alanmorris7669
    @alanmorris7669 Месяц назад +3

    This video of a guy cutting down a tree is being narrated by the same guy who cut down the tree.

  • @elliotduncan1052
    @elliotduncan1052 4 месяца назад +155

    Wow !!! Been cutting/falling trees for 40 plus years now. It goes where it want it to fall . This is a lot of extra work/ steps for falling a tree..

    • @beastfromthemiddleeast6369
      @beastfromthemiddleeast6369 4 месяца назад +17

      How about you appreciate the creativity and let that person be happy with what they have done? How does this affect you in any way?
      It's really sad how you baby bombers are so negative.

    • @elliotduncan1052
      @elliotduncan1052 3 месяца назад +18

      @@beastfromthemiddleeast6369 wow . Someone’s crabby.

    • @michaeljenkins1491
      @michaeljenkins1491 3 месяца назад +7

      Nice any videos over the 40 years?

    • @hillbillychic8417
      @hillbillychic8417 3 месяца назад +4

      ​​​@@beastfromthemiddleeast6369Lighten up Francis. What is a baby bomber?

    • @beastfromthemiddleeast6369
      @beastfromthemiddleeast6369 3 месяца назад

      @hillbillychic8417 lol. You mad over a spelling error?

  • @seandoherty1021
    @seandoherty1021 3 месяца назад +51

    I used to cut down trees like that when i was younger we didnt have a log truck and only a 6 inch diameter chipper and did everything by rope people loved us because we didnt bring in all types of heavy equipment and some of the roping techniques we were able to pull off were amazing to watch

    • @mariskaaryan7235
      @mariskaaryan7235 Месяц назад +1

      Yea but can you still do it?😂😂

    • @ImDatBamaLdy
      @ImDatBamaLdy Месяц назад +1

      Not one single use of punctuation.🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @zetdota3163
      @zetdota3163 Месяц назад +6

      @@ImDatBamaLdy Sorry - if it was hard to understand for you. Here you go:
      "I used to cut down trees like that when I was younger. We didn’t have a log truck, only a 6-inch diameter chipper, and did everything by rope. People loved us because we didn’t bring in all types of heavy equipment, and some of the roping techniques we were able to pull off were amazing to watch."

    • @FedupOnagerBR549
      @FedupOnagerBR549 Месяц назад

      LOL 😂

    • @seang.829
      @seang.829 Месяц назад

      Let me guess, your Jill Biden's husband?

  • @brianmontero1593
    @brianmontero1593 Месяц назад +18

    wen your boss isn't yelling at you about the amount of gas your using...

  • @bighoss8793
    @bighoss8793 2 месяца назад +15

    Wow this a brilliant technique for when the tree absolutely needs to drop in a specific spot.

  • @user-mg1vj6lf7w
    @user-mg1vj6lf7w 5 месяцев назад +53

    The notch is way too high. The sawdust is fine , so the power saw needs sharpening.

    • @marsbase3729
      @marsbase3729 3 месяца назад

      for that hinge technique, it has to higher than normal to allow for the stabilizer in the middle.

    • @struancochrane753
      @struancochrane753 Месяц назад

      His front notch or gob, is way too big. He has made it over 50% of the truck width. Therefore when he was showing off for Instagram he could have seen the tree snap or fall without any back cut. This method doesn't control which direction it falls, only the line, north or south. A controlled front gob 25% of the truck width back cut followed by wedges would have seen the same result. Only not gone viral, because they method of boring and efficient

  • @TB-jj9tu
    @TB-jj9tu 4 месяца назад +143

    My grandfather always told me “if you can’t fall a tree with just three cuts (two for the notch, one for the back cut) then you have no business cutting trees.”

    • @rocketdurham4926
      @rocketdurham4926 3 месяца назад +4

      Mostly right but there are specific cases where if you want to spin the tree in a direction you add a forth cut in the right place, some call it a swinging Dutchman, what’s pretty advanced and most of the time unnecessary

    • @Lightworker-ye4nv
      @Lightworker-ye4nv 3 месяца назад +12

      Well he's wrong

    • @TB-jj9tu
      @TB-jj9tu 3 месяца назад +12

      @@Lightworker-ye4nv there are many other comments that seem to agree with me. The more cuts you make in a tree the more unpredictable it gets. if the tree has a rotten center or a vertical split then all those extra cuts have created multiple points of failure and requires more time of the saw operator in harms way. A saw operator stands to the side while cutting the notch and back cut, this method puts the saw operator directly in the path of the tree when it falls all while making more cuts further weakening the tree. A rope and or wedges are far safer than this. I don’t have a logging skidder as my icon for fun. I would trust my grandfathers knowledge over some random person who became an expert by watching videos on RUclips. I’m done with you.

    • @MatejVelican
      @MatejVelican 3 месяца назад +6

      Thats why your grandpa fell trees in thr forest, and not around the buildings

    • @TB-jj9tu
      @TB-jj9tu 3 месяца назад +1

      @@MatejVelican thr forest?

  • @Kareszkoma
    @Kareszkoma Месяц назад

    My father is very intelligent, and when they were cutting wood as woodcutters, he used to do things like this to ensure good direction. He impressed lots of other workers with it.

  • @shamancredible8632
    @shamancredible8632 21 день назад +4

    How to make youtube shorts in 4 simple steps:
    1: have a squeaker voice
    2: know nothing about the topic
    3: regurgitate what other people say
    4: repeat

  • @BDOutlaw
    @BDOutlaw 4 месяца назад +27

    I've cut trees but I'm no skilled professional I'll stick to the basics and do them well. That looks cool but every cut made is a chance to make a mistake.

    • @cristianandrei5462
      @cristianandrei5462 3 месяца назад +3

      I've worked professionally as a loger, don't do what you see in this video. If the tree is older age and parts of it are rotten or is some hardwood species like Birchwood that tend to split easily it wil Barber chair when you do the long cuts down for that notch.

    • @Rhaspun
      @Rhaspun 3 месяца назад

      Does that angle cut end up near the halfway point of the diameter or a bit behind it and going into the other half of the diameter.

  • @eastbee103
    @eastbee103 Месяц назад +2

    I taught him well!!

  • @user-nz8eh8vm4c
    @user-nz8eh8vm4c 25 дней назад

    People saying it's unnecessary,,, I've notched thousands of trees. Usually good enough. But twists or knots in trees that CANT be seen can call a tree to twist and goo somewhat of a different direction. Point being,, better safe than sorry. It's minutes of extra work. Thousands of dollars if it goes wrong. Ya ding bats

  • @davidnguyen5972
    @davidnguyen5972 4 месяца назад +90

    Very nice and clever. However, the "Pro" never doing this because it "unnecessary" steps.

    • @Eelgnotsa
      @Eelgnotsa 3 месяца назад +4

      It took all less this two minute video to drop this tree away from that house in such away that it can’t fall on the house and yall are yapping it took too long 😳

    • @peterburkey3740
      @peterburkey3740 3 месяца назад +10

      @@Eelgnotsa
      You are obviously a product of our highly edited video consumer world.
      It took more than this two minute video to cut that vertical notch.
      I’ve cut trees for decades, and this notch never would have done any good. Only one time did a tree not fall just as I wanted it to.
      This notch is a waste of time.

    • @dthorne4602
      @dthorne4602 3 месяца назад +3

      This guy did nothing to stop it from falling into the house that a standard method wouldn't, he just limited the axis it was most likely to fall on. The hinge cut that he does is unnecessary and dangerous but makes an interesting video.

    • @Martin_Daniel
      @Martin_Daniel 3 месяца назад +1

      If you are near buildings better you follow these steps. Avoid lawsuits.

    • @gordjohn2322
      @gordjohn2322 3 месяца назад +4

      @@peterburkey3740 THANK YOU Peter for confirming what several of us have been trying to convince the 'RUclips experts' here that what we saw in that video concerning that vertical notch, was not only a total waste of time, but work and valuable wood as well.

  • @bulldog19751995
    @bulldog19751995 5 месяцев назад +54

    I think i lost 6 IQ points just listening to this video...

    • @danielgore861
      @danielgore861 5 месяцев назад +4

      Lol how right you are.

    • @jonnywishbone1342
      @jonnywishbone1342 4 месяца назад +1

      So you are down to five IQ points remaining...

    • @Bill-sp8kb
      @Bill-sp8kb 4 месяца назад +1

      Now you're down to zero. Just kidding, mate! Cheers 🍻

  • @georgeorwell1410
    @georgeorwell1410 21 день назад

    Yes. A solid technique. But note, the upper portion of the tree may be weighted off center or heavily unbalanced. So care is needed. This approach provides extra support for these situation too.

  • @douweverkuyl2143
    @douweverkuyl2143 Месяц назад

    Many people believe that an electric car would be better for them and de climate but the price and range anxiety stops them. But within 50 meters of a socket that is a non-argument for a chainsaw. Electric chainsaws are cheaper, always start easily and are easier to service/maintain, and do not irritate the neigbours with their noise (same applies to lawnmowers). If the socket is too far away, chainsaws (and lawnmowers) are availanle on batteries. Same advantages, but somewhat more expensive, and unless you have more than one battery, you have to charge again after an hour sawing or so.

  • @echohunter4199
    @echohunter4199 3 месяца назад +60

    I’m from Klamath County, Oregon where timber and ranching (mainly potatoes, alfalfa and sugar beets) is our lifeblood. This is just a hinge cut, every decently trained arborist also knows this. Pines and fir trees can sometimes split as the fall causing a widowmaker that can also do sever damage to property. I’ve seen amazing experienced timber fallers buck tall trees and fall huge sequoias as if it was nothing. If you want to start in that industry, go find a crew and start as a whistle punk or choke setter, wait till you have to double choke a sequoia and use two skidders to get it down the side of the mountain! What a life! That’s why I served 26 years in the Army as an Infantryman since doing a career as a lumberjack is far more dangerous.

    • @dominicferro9475
      @dominicferro9475 3 месяца назад

      That is NOT a hidge cut. Give the guy credit asshole

    • @dgonz1975
      @dgonz1975 3 месяца назад +2

      That's a master trade/skill. My industry is different and dangerous. But hats off to y'all. Skill

    • @Scorp497
      @Scorp497 3 месяца назад +1

      Hooah!!

    • @kevinmcclure2683
      @kevinmcclure2683 3 месяца назад

      Ppppppppp,l

    • @kevinmcclure2683
      @kevinmcclure2683 3 месяца назад

      ,

  • @EchoxA04
    @EchoxA04 3 месяца назад +24

    This man doing extra cuts for no reason.

    • @jimbergeron4592
      @jimbergeron4592 Месяц назад +2

      NO, ITS CALLED FUCKING "SAFTY" GUY,!!

    • @markstover7701
      @markstover7701 Месяц назад +2

      You obviously don't fell trees

    • @debunkthejunk1
      @debunkthejunk1 Месяц назад +3

      Yah, I wonder. Trees are going to fall in the direction of where the most mass is and this notch doesn't change much. If the tree is perfectly straight and balanced it's very precise but most trees are crooked and end up falling in the direction of prevailing winds. It's a cool technique but if you think a notch and a slot is going to get a tree to fall another direction other than gravity wants you're in for a big surprise.

    • @markstover7701
      @markstover7701 Месяц назад

      @@debunkthejunk1 people get them to fall any direction they want all the time. That why there are different techniques to bringvthem down. You haven't done much cutting yourself I guess?

  • @bryanpetersen1334
    @bryanpetersen1334 10 дней назад

    This activity is the most dangerous thing many people will ever do. I’m not saying they’re not adventurous, but trying to be a part time lumberjack is so deadly if you treat it with contempt.

  • @CenterMassContent
    @CenterMassContent 17 дней назад

    Never het tored of seeing THIS. Almost as incredible as the method itself, is the fact that no one in the history of felling trees came up with this until now!? On the other hand it is Really very encouraging that there is ALWAY room for creative innovation no matter what activity you are engaged in.

  • @ericbredvick813
    @ericbredvick813 4 месяца назад +50

    If a man wants to make a living he needs to get the job done safely and effectively. Unless the majority of professionals in the tree-cutting industry practice this technique or at the least promote it I would take caution in following this person's method. I have cut trees for over 25 years and have never used this type of technique and never will. I understand the concept of creating a side-to-side hinge wood to help the tree stay in the direction of the fall. I understand plunging the tip of the bar. I have plunged the tip to create a saw holder. That was after many years of handling many different sizes and brands. From gear-driven to clutch-driven. I learned that the tree will go in the direction of the front cut predominately but many factors need to be looked at. So do the manufacturers of chain saws. If you look on the side of most saws there's a direction line on the cover plate that holds the chain. So when laid on the side while felling a tree you can cut your front cut in the direction you want the tree to fall without going too deep or too shallow which in either case may cancel out the direction intended. the chance of preventing any hinge-wood when back cutting too much hinge wood or zero hinge wood. The hinge wood for those that don't know is the wood you leave uncut when coming in the back to fell the tree. I would say please do not try to replicate this unless you understand all the mechanics involved. You either understand this whole deal or you don't. And if you're not completely confident and understand the risks involved please do not try this. Plunging the tip of the bar is very dangerous. If you understand kickback or witnessed or experienced your saw coming right back at your face in a millisecond and thankfully had the chain brake engage then you might see some of the dangers of this procedure. If I were to use this type of cut, no doubt I could perform it with confidence. I would need to stop and take way more time sharpening my chains throughout the day. Not to mention how many more trees I could cut and how much longer my saw would run without refueling. And the longevity of the saw itself. Also, some trees are dead inside and the dead part may be harder than the live tissue or no holding power at all. Some trees are hollow inside making a cut like this impossible. If a person doesn't know there is decay even after seeing the signs like conks you may be creating your upcoming accident. This method seems to hold the direction of the fall to an extent. In fact, it would seem to be best needed if one side of the tree weighed more than the other. This concept if used in that case would possibly prevent the tree from falling towards the weighted side to an extent. But still, many variables and conditions need to be considered. Normally with the standard front cut wedge in the direction of the fell, you come in from the back of the tree and make a single cut in the current alignment to the front cut. You make that back cut lower or higher than the front cut you're going for or one side of the back cut being the proper height but one side higher than the other side you have now got yourself into a dangerous and possibly destructive and life-threatening situation. Normally if felling a tree that is weighted more on one side than the other you leave more hinge wood on the opposite side of the weight. So this is unique but what is not good at all is there will be many who possibly think it's genius and will decide to start cutting using this new remarkably professional-looking cut. I went long-winded just to hopefully open some eyes to prevent major injuries. There is never a band-aid used when dealing with any chainsaw injury. It is major life-threatening, life-changing, and death. So please be careful. People watch these videos and it looks easy. The big box stores push these tools along with other shop tools from table-saws to air-nailers and make it all like anyone can just buy the tool and get started. Hospital emergency room visits have increased in the last ten years with such related injuries. If you know your business which many of you watching do then you already understand. If I am wrong about this technique that's perfectly fine with me. But I am not wrong about the dangers so please take care. Erock

    • @kh40yr
      @kh40yr 4 месяца назад +4

      A precise cut for around structures, to insure you don't have to use your insurance, but, When you work for someone else in the woods, you can't play around like this and waste wood by high-stumping You'll be headed to the crew bus before lunch. At least with my company you would. I can't afford that play-around and waste. 3 cuts, ,bottom face angle face and back-cut. If you have to tap a wedge in the back cut to keep your strip clean and neat, then do it and move on.

    • @sz4179
      @sz4179 4 месяца назад +2

      100%

    • @H43339
      @H43339 4 месяца назад +5

      Long winded to say the least.
      In general I think you were right, but you made it to confusing.

    • @charvais
      @charvais 4 месяца назад +8

      Don't write a book this is RUclips... Make a video!

    • @Omar-kk9fp
      @Omar-kk9fp 3 месяца назад

      ​​@@H43339...too.... Means excessive or excessively. To is a preposition.

  • @mcadr4925
    @mcadr4925 5 месяцев назад +26

    “Unique”💀

  • @ChefDuane
    @ChefDuane 9 дней назад

    Professional tree felling by a skilled specialist. I would expect nothing less.

  • @johnstott1431
    @johnstott1431 2 дня назад

    Nice, if only all trees were so perfect.

  • @jamaluddinahmad5632
    @jamaluddinahmad5632 4 месяца назад +43

    The two wedges can do the job. Vertical cut was not required.

    • @YeeeeeHaaaaa
      @YeeeeeHaaaaa 3 месяца назад

      It’s all a matter of someone else’s opinion anyway. 🤨

    • @2007001313
      @2007001313 3 месяца назад +1

      Could it swing backwards because of the weight - just asking.a tree with weight going forward is falling forward , notch or no notch 😮😮😮, seemed overkill with weight already bearing forward

    • @DuvibdDuvusbudhd
      @DuvibdDuvusbudhd Месяц назад

      Weong

    • @slipperyjohnson7016
      @slipperyjohnson7016 Месяц назад

      It is if you want it to fall exact. Sometimes a tree is right next to something and no matter how good you notch it it can still twist. This makes it fall straight.

  • @ricklong3260
    @ricklong3260 4 месяца назад +10

    Not that cut and dried trees grow towards the sunlight.
    They can heavy one side or another..true.a rope as. High ad you can then put a pull with a vehicle.
    Just have a long enough rope..

    • @backwoods6050
      @backwoods6050 Месяц назад

      What? I thought only Yoda talked like this.

  • @user-ue4by4fc6b
    @user-ue4by4fc6b 5 месяцев назад +184

    I’ve cut trees down all my life, and I’ve never had to do that, and they all fallen where I’ve wanted them to.

    • @cjgromlich1242
      @cjgromlich1242 5 месяцев назад +8

      Same all these people talkin about it’s normal🤣 only normal if you don’t have confidence and can’t drop a tree the right way

    • @ismaelgutierrez299
      @ismaelgutierrez299 5 месяцев назад +5

      Where you at? I have a 70ft tall it needs to be cut let me know

    • @billyraub8197
      @billyraub8197 5 месяцев назад +15

      I wouldn’t BRAG about you being perfect in the cutting of trees falling where you want them to all the time because that’s how a person gets hurt by thinking they above the law of nature , I feel sorry for you when your ( they fall where I want them to ) comes back to bite you in the ass when the wind suddenly appears and changes the tree direction!!!

    • @jamesbeeman8192
      @jamesbeeman8192 4 месяца назад +4

      Me 2. Notch, set hinge, back cut to triggerwood, trip trigger!

    • @joshuacook4273
      @joshuacook4273 4 месяца назад +6

      They haven’t all fallen exactly where you wanted them to.

  • @SAGAR-rv9vb
    @SAGAR-rv9vb Месяц назад

    This is what we do in our country INDIA... it's so basic... and we call it AAPPU in our country...!!! 🤩

  • @xion637
    @xion637 Месяц назад

    I learned this when I had a job cutting trees. Yes it helps control the fall direction but it also ensures your chainsaw never gets stuck in the tree while it's falling. Safety first.

  • @fatmike5038
    @fatmike5038 4 месяца назад +40

    he needs to sharpen the chain first

  • @Arthu8
    @Arthu8 3 месяца назад +15

    Only when I see a tree fall upward,I’ll be impressed 😂😂😂

  • @armonfrohlich6348
    @armonfrohlich6348 Месяц назад

    The technique is only applicable to a limited extent. Firstly, only trees with a certain diameter can be used, otherwise there is a risk of breaking, especially in a bit of wind. Secondly, this technique is relatively accurate, but takes a long time. You look at the growth of the tree to determine its center of gravity and the corresponding direction of fall. And with this information, you make cuts so that the tree has no other choice but to fall where you want it to. And it does so with pinpoint accuracy. You will hardly ever see a professional use this type of cut.

  • @mikemaga2
    @mikemaga2 3 дня назад

    This only works if there's not a significant enough weight pull in another direction. Example: If there is a big enough weight pull in the direction of the house, the tree will fall on the house

  • @naw1126
    @naw1126 3 месяца назад +35

    Looks like the tree had already been top out. When the tree falls, you can see the shadow on the tree beside it that it been top out and you can tell by the noise it makes that it ain't the whole tree.

    • @randysmith9636
      @randysmith9636 Месяц назад +4

      AND?

    • @alvinmingo6353
      @alvinmingo6353 Месяц назад +2

      I mean duh you can see the pieces in the background😂😂😂why you hating on the man skills lol

    • @adrake3206
      @adrake3206 Месяц назад

      Just as you should. What's your point?

    • @SydneySpurs1967
      @SydneySpurs1967 Месяц назад +2

      This guy is obviously a skilled arborist and has most likely climbed the tree with spiked boots and straps(with a safety harness on and dropped the tree in sections.
      That is the safest way to do it. That beast of a saw is running perfectly. He would sharpen every tooth on that saw at least once a day, using just the right amount of bar cutter lubrication.
      This guy is highly skilled!

  • @brandonbagshaw3898
    @brandonbagshaw3898 5 месяцев назад +92

    What a bunch of bullshit I’ve been logging 33 yrs it’s not done like that

    • @mtman2
      @mtman2 4 месяца назад +9

      Right me too-> tho this is beside or between bldgs is the idea for certain situations...!

    • @rodenreyes6320
      @rodenreyes6320 4 месяца назад +2

      Easy if tree leans away from property...half or more than half the time, it don't.

    • @seventeen912
      @seventeen912 4 месяца назад +4

      If one carefully studies the concept of this cut……it is BS! Consider the completion of ALL the cutting required to achieve this,…….. the back cut wouldn’t even be necessary because the tree would already be completely free of the stump before performing the back cut! Agreed, it’s BS!

    • @willstuart4504
      @willstuart4504 4 месяца назад +9

      It literally WAS done like that mate.. lol Maybe different then you in the fields but absolutely worked to perfection here. Why so much Hate?? Especially considering he's in YOUR line of work??

    • @Bill-sp8kb
      @Bill-sp8kb 4 месяца назад +2

      He does it that way. That's all that matters.

  • @julieashworth7193
    @julieashworth7193 Месяц назад

    He is a clever guy..well done ..definitely super talented 👏🏻 👍🫶🏻

  • @dibaldgyfm9933
    @dibaldgyfm9933 2 месяца назад

    The decisive thing is that the tree at the falling side weighs more than on the other side. The cutting can only do so much. Removing branches if at all possible can be decisive. If heavy winds add the air factor.
    And be prepared to clear the ground.
    ❤❤❤

  • @wadewittrock3673
    @wadewittrock3673 3 месяца назад +33

    Can't wait to try it out in my neighbors backyard to get my mountain view back.

  • @wudegoddd
    @wudegoddd 3 месяца назад +38

    is anyone wondering why they never show the top of the tree? Because there is none.

    • @melliW1
      @melliW1 3 месяца назад +1

      du hast Recht, man hätte es am Schatten gesehen👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻💯

    • @patrickshishivenivanwyk1843
      @patrickshishivenivanwyk1843 3 месяца назад +2

      The sound of that stump falling compared to would be tree 🌳

    • @lancegreen9695
      @lancegreen9695 3 месяца назад

      Ql​@@melliW1

    • @jonpaul9514
      @jonpaul9514 3 месяца назад +8

      Does it really matter?

    • @jame2742
      @jame2742 3 месяца назад +4

      Safer way to film and show the technique. Got a couple sourpusses in here.

  • @rf5390
    @rf5390 22 дня назад

    Wow, so he is spectacular because he actually does his job correctly?? Wtf has this world come to?

  • @alankerr8036
    @alankerr8036 22 дня назад

    Yes, this guy has done this once or twice before. Nice and Precise

  • @user-se4tn7uw4o
    @user-se4tn7uw4o 5 месяцев назад +12

    You cut the back side to allow the remaining attached grain act as your hinge point
    Then your tree turns on the hinge to the location where you want it to go. Only 2 cuts.

    • @MichaelGrim-zw5vs
      @MichaelGrim-zw5vs 4 месяца назад +4

      He obviously doesn't have a clue how to sharpen his chain. After learning how to sharpen it he can buy a real saw and chunk that junk into the dumpster.

    • @C.CUMM1NGS
      @C.CUMM1NGS 4 месяца назад

      3 cuts 2 for the notch 1 at the back 😜

  • @JDS11ify
    @JDS11ify 4 месяца назад +21

    Never had to use something like this in my almost 60 years cutting down trees. His notch should be level and sloping up, and not sloping down. Also, the fancy way of steering the tree can be extremely dangerous as burying the tip of the bar into the tree can cause kick-backs. If you cannot calculate the fall of the tree by considering foliage, wind and available space ... don't do it to begin with.

    • @lauracleveland4017
      @lauracleveland4017 2 месяца назад +1

      You better listen to this man - herein is WISDOM!!

  • @bawinilebongani1467
    @bawinilebongani1467 18 дней назад

    I almost insulted the guy, but I decided to wait and observe this. This is an amazing trick and effective 💯

  • @timbarry5080
    @timbarry5080 2 месяца назад

    He doesn't just cut the back of the tree. He's careful to not cut the vertical hinge he just made. Cool technique

  • @tonyc5002
    @tonyc5002 4 месяца назад +11

    If the tree hits you, the helmet will not be of help.

    • @dposting2941
      @dposting2941 4 месяца назад +2

      No, but if branches break off as it falls, it can save him for many, depending what size. It helps the odds. But the whole tree, yeah, wouldn't help.

    • @rogerjoesbury9410
      @rogerjoesbury9410 Месяц назад

      😃😃😃😊

  • @MrSagerific95
    @MrSagerific95 3 месяца назад +31

    This dude has never sharpened a chain in his life.

    • @LaVanderWilliams
      @LaVanderWilliams Месяц назад +2

      He was using the saw to trim the branches and top it. The reason I'm saying this is because of how the tree landed with a thud, and no crackling branches.
      Although you made a valid point, because that's a softwood. Pine tar does affect the performance of the chains.

    • @JavierRamirez-ks9ji
      @JavierRamirez-ks9ji Месяц назад +1

      I haven’t either we just swap them with new chains. Don’t have time to sharpen

    • @MrSagerific95
      @MrSagerific95 Месяц назад

      @@JavierRamirez-ks9ji wild.

  • @peterwarren1824
    @peterwarren1824 Месяц назад +1

    Notch cut. Not unique. However this fellow's skill is superb.

  • @brianmcd9492
    @brianmcd9492 Месяц назад

    I'd use a Hand Saw."Before" I Cut down a dead tree, "I Tie a Rope Tight on an above Branch in the Fall Direction".The Rope I Pull when "The Wedge" is Removed (Standing Aside of The Fall Direction).The Wedge Removed "The Invisible Wind" can "Twist or Turn the Tree on to the Lumberjack.🙂👍Never stand on Front of "The Wedge" or Cut down Trees on a "Windy Day".

  • @user-wk1nv1qm2x
    @user-wk1nv1qm2x 5 месяцев назад +17

    You know not everyone is an expert so maybe this little bit of advice will save someone I live in Vermont have used a chain saw for 37 yrs mostly cutting fire wood but I’ve read about people that work out in the woods with years of experience and that’s where they find them my advice have someone with experience show you always respect that saw and that tree, good luck 🙏

    • @marvvoskuhl9588
      @marvvoskuhl9588 4 месяца назад

      No thanks Notheau

    • @lancecardillo733
      @lancecardillo733 4 месяца назад +1

      Ok Mr no nothing them cuts are more dangerous using your bar tip pushing it in. . cutting trees or playing junga

  • @user-gb9dm2wv1v
    @user-gb9dm2wv1v 5 месяцев назад +11

    The tree has also been topped.

  • @billtmarchi4320
    @billtmarchi4320 5 месяцев назад +52

    Uniquely a waste of time. The log was 10 feet tall.

    • @davidrosenau3136
      @davidrosenau3136 4 месяца назад +1

      Don't find many pines 10 dt tall. Good observation.

    • @jasonliebenberg7918
      @jasonliebenberg7918 4 месяца назад +3

      ...it was just,a demo'...

    • @billtmarchi4320
      @billtmarchi4320 4 месяца назад

      @@jasonliebenberg7918 ya they're all "demos"

    • @johnhpalmer6098
      @johnhpalmer6098 4 месяца назад +1

      Dude, I watch August Hunicke out on the west coast (Grants Pass Oregon) and he is an arborist, and uses most of these, if not all of them, depending on what he's cutting, whether it's a leaner and what other obstacles he may be dealing with, and sometimes has to use a guide line to ensure the tree falls where he wants it to. he's been doing this for decades and has a full crew and business.

  • @jeff_the_killer999
    @jeff_the_killer999 Месяц назад

    Thank god you narrated every small detail of this video. It's not like i have eyes or a brain to interpret what i see with said eyes

  • @JMS-2111
    @JMS-2111 3 месяца назад +5

    My stepfather was a professional lumberjack for decades, he did three cuts and could land a tree between two others 1m apart. You don't need so many cuts or have them so high up to be precise.

    • @Karen-jg9pv
      @Karen-jg9pv 2 месяца назад

      Fact.

    • @bilogskii2216
      @bilogskii2216 2 месяца назад

      You don't if you are a true master with decades of experience. But for those new to this job this is quite useful.

  • @Kent-mb8gp
    @Kent-mb8gp 2 месяца назад +7

    His "Jenga" cuts really don't do anything, although it does look cooler when the tree falls and the Jenga piece slides out. That's why they did this cut because they are trying to sell chainsaws.

  • @HanumanLoki
    @HanumanLoki 28 дней назад

    Everything is spot on except all of the narration... That tree was going that way even if he just made a barber chair back cut. Good demonstration on the sawer's side.

  • @clydelewis4231
    @clydelewis4231 4 месяца назад +7

    Outstanding skills ! Thank you for sharing !

  • @ChainDragGONE
    @ChainDragGONE 5 месяцев назад +17

    Had a big elm tree with a wicked lean. I cut it down with this technique, and it fell exactly on line with the notch seemingly defying gravity based on the lean. 👍😎

    • @dawsongiesken9530
      @dawsongiesken9530 5 месяцев назад

      I call bs

    • @user-ur4zj7px9d
      @user-ur4zj7px9d 2 месяца назад

      This is probably the most significant use case of this technique. If you got some heavy leaner that you need to redirect a couple degrees off his lean.
      Otherwise I see no real use for this technique.

  • @michaelwilliams3232
    @michaelwilliams3232 21 день назад

    The notch is called a gob and the last cut is intended to create a hinge, controlling the fall and stopping kick back.

  • @McNair0320
    @McNair0320 17 дней назад

    Thank you. Sharpened chain is the key factor.

  • @LarrySmith-yp5hk
    @LarrySmith-yp5hk 5 месяцев назад +22

    It's a hinge cut . Every tree man does this...

    • @dawsongiesken9530
      @dawsongiesken9530 5 месяцев назад +5

      No only the idiots that want clicks

    • @thefreese1
      @thefreese1 4 месяца назад

      Only when it's needed .. and it sure wasn't needed here .. that tree was leaning like the Tower of Pisa , with no trees on the side to steer it and make it roll on the cut ..

  • @johnray5568
    @johnray5568 4 месяца назад +10

    I love seeing clever workers that really think about their job and come up with original processes.
    My cap is off to you.

  • @thedrakekingyadig6250
    @thedrakekingyadig6250 Месяц назад

    Cute. Ask the old boys in the woods, more trees, less time, always accurate.

  • @svt80221
    @svt80221 Месяц назад

    people don't realize how dangerous falling trees are. not only to property but to people. i have lost family members to felled trees.

  • @stevegrignon
    @stevegrignon 4 месяца назад +3

    Alot time in front of the notch, be careful

  • @robertburns7877
    @robertburns7877 3 месяца назад +10

    All the haters who think the extra cuts are unnecessary probably don't like to season their food, either.

  • @moshpitmachine
    @moshpitmachine Месяц назад

    It's called a hinge cut and it's pretty common in suburban areas where the houses are close together. Very well done though

  • @charlesncharge6298
    @charlesncharge6298 Месяц назад

    It's called hinging or hinge cutting, and it's not unique. It's cool, but it's literally the preferred method for felling trees in residential areas. This guy did not invent it, but he does it expertly.

  • @BertPFISTER
    @BertPFISTER 3 месяца назад +8

    I hate to burst your bubble! But when I bought my 2nd chainsaw in my life; a 16” Stylh Chainsaw! The owners manual tells you how to do this exact cut in the Tree! It’s a Safety measure To prevent the chain from kicking back at you and harming you the schedule come up with this the manufacture did to protect the owner of the chainsaw!
    Get a clue people

  • @brainpain9235
    @brainpain9235 5 месяцев назад +4

    Yeah, do this to a tree that’s not been topped yet

  • @donnysmith6676
    @donnysmith6676 25 дней назад

    This guy knows exactly what he's doing

  • @46buzz
    @46buzz Месяц назад

    His technique isn't all that unique, really but it was well done.

  • @obinnachiagoro1102
    @obinnachiagoro1102 4 месяца назад +3

    Talk less and allow the audience watch

  • @_AriseChicken
    @_AriseChicken 5 месяцев назад +30

    Its not unique its standard you ipad baby.

    • @joshuacook4273
      @joshuacook4273 4 месяца назад +2

      Where are you working now? It’s not common practice here so just wondering.

    • @tonyswhirl
      @tonyswhirl 4 месяца назад

      ​@@joshuacook4273Ally Oop used it. That is how old it is.