200ft + Tree Felling by expert logger In California Mountain Wilderness (HD) 200ft Jeff Pine

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2019
  • Skip to 13.42 to see a massive sugar pine getting dropped!
    With a friends crew in the mountains.
    7,000ft up in the Sierra National Forest, just south of Yosemite Wilderness..These guys are the real deal they live completely off grid in tent camps for months at a time, totally detached from literally anything.This particular crew would travel home once every few weekends during the cutting season..Nothing but big steep grades, massive granite monoliths and endless forest up there. Pretty crazy watching 200ft trees hit the ground. The biggest tree to be cut in this video would be the massive 200+ft Jefferson pine at the end of the video.
    Thanks for watching!
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Комментарии • 226

  • @660stihl
    @660stihl 3 года назад +45

    One of the best timbercutting vids around! Thanks!

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +7

      Thank you for watching🙏🏼

    • @jacobfurnish7450
      @jacobfurnish7450 3 года назад +1

      @@TommySchuch sugar pine got bark beetle or something? Also is that a ported 661 or 880 magnum. I got respect for guys who have to haul around one of those all day. I almost can't keep up with a 562 husky XD.

    • @Bryant1963
      @Bryant1963 2 года назад

      Yeah OK. 🤣😂 Other than this guy walking around & going slower than shit almost like he’s about 75 years old, he did just OK. Also, you don’t drop your timber into other trees & brush the hell out of other trees with a cutting strip that wide open.

    • @franciscoruzafa1974
      @franciscoruzafa1974 2 года назад

      Bien

    • @JohnnyIDive37
      @JohnnyIDive37 Год назад

      Totally agree!

  • @ecslogging
    @ecslogging 3 года назад +34

    This is what that show axe men should be..could watch this all day not some Hollywood drama shit

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +3

      Haha ya man thanks!!

    • @travisteeter5072
      @travisteeter5072 3 года назад +1

      Damn straight

    • @jaredmccormick
      @jaredmccormick 3 года назад +1

      I'm working for one of the companies that was on ax men. I tell you what... the history channel did a fine job as journalists. 🤣

  • @limestonecowboy9219
    @limestonecowboy9219 2 года назад +14

    The best part was when he lost the leaner down hill..I've cut timber for many years and it happens to the best of us. I just loved his reaction. 😄

  • @waynespicer856
    @waynespicer856 2 года назад +7

    The tree fell the wrong direction from his notch . At 11:32 you can hear him say f- - - - - g thing as the tree fall back on the wedges. I,ve had that happen more than once ;very dangerous! Have to be on your game at all times . Great video!

    • @tormodiv
      @tormodiv 11 месяцев назад

      Sure. That camera guy luckily stood where he did...

  • @jerrygoad3093
    @jerrygoad3093 3 года назад +7

    I don't say it too much from the start to end this guy's good safe been doing a 25 years try to learn something every time out I definitely like what I see awesome work tree man

  • @JohnnyIDive37
    @JohnnyIDive37 Год назад +3

    power cutting great job BUD! fantastic saw👍👍👍

  • @michellepugh2859
    @michellepugh2859 3 года назад +10

    Can't believe I've never seen this?? Honestly had my doubts at the beginning but imo a very good video!! Thanks for putting it up and hats off to the Sawyer he's definitely earning his money.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +2

      Thank you much for the comment, happy you appreciate the video!

  • @jamesmooney5348
    @jamesmooney5348 2 года назад +6

    Enjoyed the video. Blessing to be able to do what you guys are doing.

  • @wigleboy
    @wigleboy 3 года назад +19

    This guy looks like he is falling sick or dying trees for fire prevention (maybe a wildland firefighter himself). He sure knows what he is doing. It is the most dangerous job in the US and Canada for a reason.

    • @jameshunt995
      @jameshunt995 2 года назад +3

      It's true it's very dangerous I enjoy it's been an awesome job been doing it for 3 years now

  • @IRONHORSE427RACING
    @IRONHORSE427RACING 3 года назад +8

    That Man could work on my crew any damned day he wanted ! He knows his work.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +3

      No kidding, he's a true professional!

    • @jerrygoad3093
      @jerrygoad3093 3 года назад +2

      That's the only thing I didn't say in my comment damn good job from start to finish y'all good old boys be safe and take care all you're in my prayers

    • @mauroesquibel2767
      @mauroesquibel2767 2 года назад +1

      What company is hiring I’m trying to flop hogs

    • @PapawMule
      @PapawMule 7 месяцев назад

      He dang sure knows how to fall timber..!

  • @Cerebrosity
    @Cerebrosity 3 года назад +7

    Very cool...thanks for documenting and sharing.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад

      Thank you, appreciate the comment!

  • @user-zw7nq5im4c
    @user-zw7nq5im4c 6 месяцев назад +1

    You are best just keep going working hard tree after tree so big u know where to put them down God bless live long work safe for family

  • @kevinboyes2619
    @kevinboyes2619 3 года назад +5

    Nice to watch a good faller some of these guys that don't put under cuts in scary nice job

  • @gjbingham
    @gjbingham 3 года назад +16

    I grow forest trees and I love watching logging vids. Old growth trees are like gems though - rare and beautiful. Sad to see that old pine come down. Kind of like going into a church and wrecking the place.....

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +16

      That is a fair statement that I agree with most of , however most of these trees in the video have health issues and are either dead or on the way out.

    • @magicthewoodchopper4209
      @magicthewoodchopper4209 3 года назад +1

      Tbh and completely fair on this one i have to fully agree with both you gentlemen because you both are 100% correct here.

    • @johnstack4316
      @johnstack4316 3 года назад +4

      Most people dont realize trees of this size are dying. Redwoods live to be super old, pine hemlock n red fir(Douglass for) tap out a tree around 200 to 300 years old. Trees are a renewable resource. Out here in the west there is so much forrest that the young ones will grow to be old timers.

    • @EternalWithin
      @EternalWithin 3 года назад

      @@TommySchuch I agree. But why cut down a dying tree? Unless someone's life is in danger we should leave it. Dead trees are supposed to be in nature and its all part of the natural cycle. For some reason people like to think they know what's better for nature better than nature does itself.

    • @JS-oy6nn
      @JS-oy6nn 3 года назад +1

      @@EternalWithin think it’s called industry

  • @user-ktm890rider
    @user-ktm890rider 2 месяца назад

    The only thing better at the end of the day working in hot dry conditions like that is a couple ice cold beers 🍻

  • @brendanthebattlerstafford5145
    @brendanthebattlerstafford5145 3 года назад +5

    Thanks for your time and efforts Tommy 👊

  • @edwinladshow5791
    @edwinladshow5791 3 года назад +5

    That was Awesome!!

  •  3 года назад +2

    Nice work!

  • @therealjosephpowell
    @therealjosephpowell 2 года назад +4

    That's a Ponderosa (Yellow) Pine. I can tell by the needles and the shape of the branches shown at 22:15, and once the tree was down. Great vid!

  • @timberray9572
    @timberray9572 3 года назад +26

    I can always tell a pro by the way they move, to the untrained eye it actually looks slow but every move is calculated and precise and three minutes later a real big tree is on the ground.

    • @willisbruce4044
      @willisbruce4044 3 года назад +2

      This and the constant even load on the chainsaw. Always at it's maximum without bugging it down

    • @scottcarter461
      @scottcarter461 2 года назад

      Well the good thing about hiring this dude is the mill gets a couple more inches in diameter out of the deal before they finally hit the ground. Wtf up with the weird cut on the low side every time! Just dog in and wrap around and cut it ffff down!

    • @scottcarter461
      @scottcarter461 2 года назад

      Oh yeah did I say I owned my own business and dumped thousands upon thousands of pewney trees like that?!

    • @scottcarter461
      @scottcarter461 2 года назад

      Oh yeah never knew trees even grew on ground that flat! I guess I'm not easily impressed with tree falling vids

    • @mauroesquibel2767
      @mauroesquibel2767 2 года назад

      Yes

  • @JS-oy6nn
    @JS-oy6nn 3 года назад +4

    Fella is running low at the end. This is what a day at the office looks like 👍🏻 hats off to you sir for a job well done.

  • @andyd9199
    @andyd9199 Год назад

    He makes it look easy, a pro!

  • @j.settle6448
    @j.settle6448 2 года назад +5

    WOW! I never dreamed a person would be allowed to drop a tree in Kalifonia!!

    • @a.boss.__09
      @a.boss.__09 2 года назад +1

      Yeah I wonder why the fire ?

    • @Mudpuppyjunior
      @Mudpuppyjunior Год назад +2

      @@a.boss.__09
      I was a logger for 30 years in CA, mostly north of these guys, starting in 1985. There is a lot of logging in CA and we still have the biggest softwood timber on average in the world. There's a whole lot more red tape than when I started but you can still knock them over.

    • @a.boss.__09
      @a.boss.__09 Год назад +1

      @@Mudpuppyjunior Damnn that’s cool

  • @charlesbynum9534
    @charlesbynum9534 3 года назад

    That was a very nice video. I would love to put my big ol sthil in them trees

  • @aburgheim
    @aburgheim 2 года назад +1

    Cutn down the torches!! Good Job

  • @victor-emmanuel7485
    @victor-emmanuel7485 2 года назад +6

    Fantastic video! Really captures the atmosphere. I love what I do... but am always a bit jealous of a job like this. Does the logger in this video have a channel/ instagram page himself?

  • @Mudpuppyjunior
    @Mudpuppyjunior Год назад +1

    I love all the armchair pros in the comments criticizing his technique or his saw or telling everyone what tree is what. I'm sure if I read far enough someone has complained his backcuts are not precisely 2.5 inches above the undercut and he didn't use his tweezers to clean any tiny dutchmen out of the hinge.
    I logged and owned timberland in this area for 30 years. That guy is doing exactly what I want a faller to do. His stumps are low and his backcut is on plane with his face cut so he doesn't have to waste time trimming the log nor does the landing man. He's generally trying to put the trees in the best spot but he isn't spending all day using sticks and tapes and calculators trying to hit a perfect spot; he's knocking frickin trees over nice and fast just as he's paid to and if a few get crunched in the process; they make logs too. That is real, production falling* done the way real loggers want it done.
    *Waiting for the armchair pro to correct me and tell me it's "felling". Yes. It is. Nobody in the real world of logging cares, only guys in armchairs.

  • @autoracingtv6445
    @autoracingtv6445 3 года назад +4

    nice work Tommy, what saw are you using and how many trees do you think you've cut down?

  • @michaellee9883
    @michaellee9883 Год назад +1

    Great video. It looks like the left side of his chaps have seen a lot of chain hits. Yikes! Wear protective gear everybody!

  • @zucar9hamid
    @zucar9hamid 2 года назад

    Nice video sir, have a nice day

  • @jakemesa3211
    @jakemesa3211 3 года назад +2

    Got to love trying wedge big dead snags! You ain't cut much if ya haven't lost one or two over backwards or sideways. Good video 👍👍

    • @jeffstorm7166
      @jeffstorm7166 3 года назад +1

      People don't live long wedging snags

    • @jakemesa3211
      @jakemesa3211 3 года назад +2

      @@jeffstorm7166 no one likes wedging snags. Sometimes you have to though. That one looked pretty solid. It's the rotted ones that are really dangerous and should not be wedged at, all if possible.

    • @craigwhittingslow9689
      @craigwhittingslow9689 3 года назад

      Smart callers us jacks!

  • @garymiller685
    @garymiller685 3 года назад +2

    a big saw for that job love it

    • @bh2861
      @bh2861 3 года назад

      That saw is actually under powered

  • @danrobsonjr247
    @danrobsonjr247 3 года назад +5

    Looks familiar and is middle elevation looks to be between 4 thousand and 5,500 feet. Growing up I watched dad my uncle and gramps fall lots of these white fir tall skinny trees that in most cases busted apart on impact .Even though they were green they where rotten inside it’s why they have a more colorful name to those of us that where in the logging industry. Nice yellow/ ponderosa pine at the end. Nice hearing those big sthils too along with the trees hitting the ground. My family logged the Eldorado county area of Northern California mostly the iron mountain area for you flatlanders its now called the Mormon immigrant trail area

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +3

      That's awesome,thanks for the history! Im familiar with that area in northern Cali, very cool . The elevation here is 7,200ft as I have property here and also have an altimeter and topo ;) I appreciate the comment my friend
      happy new year!

    • @edgardner2919
      @edgardner2919 2 года назад +1

      I logged there to! Worked for Robinson timber.

    • @Mudpuppyjunior
      @Mudpuppyjunior Год назад +2

      I logged and owned property on the North South Rd off of Iron Mountain Rd and owned several pieces up in the Camino/Georgetown area and points south into Calaveras, Tuolumne and Tulare counties.

    • @Mudpuppyjunior
      @Mudpuppyjunior Год назад +1

      @@edgardner2919
      Small world. Robinson logged a piece for me that required a yarder across the canyon from Camino. in 1994.

    • @danrobsonjr247
      @danrobsonjr247 Год назад

      @@Mudpuppyjunior my grandfather may have logged your property. He logged all over iron mountain rd from sly park all the way to the top where it hits 88 and along 88 . Especially north south, meice , light canyon , alder creek, camp creek, silver fork , and packsaddle pass areas along with around grizzly flats, all along hi way 50 from Tahoe to placerville all over ice house rd and every rd off it writes lake rd and all Rds off it all over the Georgetown area hell hole volcanoville and West Point area. And all over pleasant valley.

  • @tmttm4743
    @tmttm4743 3 года назад

    ไม้ดี คนตัดสุดยอด

  • @treydogg77
    @treydogg77 3 года назад +1

    He makes that look easy and fun. Let me tell ya fellow tubers your watching skill with 30+ yrs experience.

    • @bh2861
      @bh2861 3 года назад

      Calm down chief

  • @Dave_9547
    @Dave_9547 4 месяца назад

    Good video, thanks for posting. White Fir, also known as P*ss fir not only because of the water they sometimes contain, but how it smells. Sugar pine can also have water in them, very sweet tasting however, but hard on your digestive tract, or so fallers have told me.

  • @jacobfurnish7450
    @jacobfurnish7450 2 года назад +3

    Massive respect if you have to haul around a 660! Those things are heavy. Cool vid too. Sucks they have health problems (bark beetle I assume) but still, nice looking wood!

    • @dennisthemenace57
      @dennisthemenace57 2 года назад +1

      Looks like a 661

    • @austindenotter19
      @austindenotter19 Год назад +1

      Of course as you know beetles infest uncut timber and ruin it. We need to get back to cutting live timber so that the beetles dont get so dominant.

  • @te7695
    @te7695 3 года назад +2

    Like a Pro 🤤👍

  • @yowser8780
    @yowser8780 2 года назад +2

    Widowmakers on the last tree. Dangerous stuff.

  • @18hawkster
    @18hawkster 3 года назад +1

    Bad ass video! Nice job! Where were you logging at? Looks like Shaver Lake area?

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад

      Close to Jackass Lakes 🤙🏼

  • @thomasetchebarren2901
    @thomasetchebarren2901 3 года назад +2

    Like a boss

  • @paulmorrey733
    @paulmorrey733 3 года назад

    Great Skills Thanks for sharing. Anyone know what model of Saw ?

  • @garysublett3493
    @garysublett3493 7 месяцев назад

    This Trinity county...reminds me of southfork mountian😊

  • @brianvasquez4484
    @brianvasquez4484 3 года назад +2

    I know next to nothing about logging but can easily recognize this fella is a master at his craft. About halfway through was he doing a plunge cut into that tree?

    • @Bryant1963
      @Bryant1963 2 года назад +4

      You should’ve just stopped your message after the first 7 words because that was the only part you got right! Lol.

  • @johngray8250
    @johngray8250 4 года назад +6

    Wow! Beautiful timber and a master faller.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  4 года назад +2

      Thanks for the comment, and no doubt he is master of his craft

    • @w2tb36
      @w2tb36 3 года назад +2

      @@TommySchuch But wedging that one against its lean was a bit optimistic. Nevertheless, this guy knows how to work with a (big) saw.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +1

      @@w2tb36 Agreed :)

  • @gewa6472
    @gewa6472 3 года назад

    It`s mans world,absolutly.

  • @ACOUSTIC_4LOVE
    @ACOUSTIC_4LOVE 3 года назад +2

    Them some Monarchs. I Was down deep in the Yolla Bolly’ wilderness back in early 90s. Saw some Doug fir 10’ across at the Base. Huge fires last few years may have taken em out

  • @JRMny-nl4ut
    @JRMny-nl4ut 2 года назад +1

    The rotten tree that broke out on the way down looks like it went sideways from its face. Did it? It looked to be leaning back pretty hard.

  • @cavemanfaller9886
    @cavemanfaller9886 3 года назад +2

    Is that mark scott?

  • @dan-dan-da-treeman
    @dan-dan-da-treeman 3 года назад +1

    Your saws must be going through hell. Well done folks.

  • @maxpuppy96
    @maxpuppy96 3 года назад +4

    6:18 He is a good faller watch how he hangs in there to the bitter end to save the tree from cracking and also he can steer it a little

  • @williamsnow9976
    @williamsnow9976 2 года назад +1

    REAL MEN all i can say

  • @stephenmork3925
    @stephenmork3925 3 года назад

    518 .. best skidded in my opinion

  • @secondgear6079
    @secondgear6079 2 года назад

    Stumps keep making them that last one was big

  • @MarcioCostacantor
    @MarcioCostacantor 2 года назад +2

    Bom dia! Pra mim é uma honra viu prestigiar seu trabalho, vamos sempre juntos somar e fortalecer nossos objetivos, Conto com você, eu já estou por aqui..

  • @idaholewis265
    @idaholewis265 3 года назад

    11:45 Uh oh! 🤣 I’ve been there, Done that

  • @bob_frazier
    @bob_frazier 3 года назад +4

    Right there at 11:43 watching that snag go to shit is why this is the most dangerous job in America.

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 3 года назад

      One off* at least.
      I constantly see fighter pilots nagging about how their job is the most dangerous, BS :)
      Once heard a story of a fighter pilot breaking up with his gf, once he found out what her occupation was (shell diver), apparently his dick shrunk.

  • @SUROBLEDEKchannel
    @SUROBLEDEKchannel 3 года назад

    Hadir sobat pemula nyimak🙏

  • @darrellpatterson8955
    @darrellpatterson8955 3 года назад +1

    Damn those are some big trees....

    • @w8stral
      @w8stral 3 года назад

      They grow REALLY fast. Not all that old.

    • @jimmartin7881
      @jimmartin7881 3 года назад

      @@w8stral Yeah, only around 3 or 4 hundred years. Like the blink of an eye, lol.

    • @w8stral
      @w8stral 3 года назад +1

      @@jimmartin7881 Half that. ~150 years. Yes, like blink of an eye. That is roughly double average logging practices here which is roughly 65-->85 years though many places are being cut every 55years for very small dimensional lumber.

    • @jimmartin7881
      @jimmartin7881 3 года назад

      @@w8stral Okay whatever, the guy doing the video only states the age in the comment section but what does he know? Lol.

    • @w8stral
      @w8stral 3 года назад +1

      @@jimmartin7881 .... That area was logged previously. WE KNOW the maximum age of the trees. Appears neither you nor the idiot doing the video knows this. This is not old growth timber. 2nd growth.

  • @ryanhudson3807
    @ryanhudson3807 3 года назад

    Mnt Lasson?

  • @ronaldwilkins6056
    @ronaldwilkins6056 3 года назад

    @11:37...here we go!

  • @sawboneiomc8809
    @sawboneiomc8809 3 года назад +4

    Great job....just wish on that last tree he hadn’t dropped them on those young trees.

  • @daniellynthlin6840
    @daniellynthlin6840 3 года назад +1

    How big at base was the last tree

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад

      I would say at least 10ft but more likely closer to 12ft

  • @thomascheney6083
    @thomascheney6083 2 года назад

    Are some large old trees retained as part of logging. It looks like a nice operation, getting timber but it looks like the forest is still there.

  • @raikan
    @raikan Год назад

    Ok👍👍 bagus👍👍 OMG good👍👍

  • @ryanhudson3807
    @ryanhudson3807 3 года назад +1

    Captain snaggle buster.

  • @firewoodwarrior4396
    @firewoodwarrior4396 5 лет назад +1

    Impressive.

  • @bulletholesbobby
    @bulletholesbobby 11 месяцев назад

    Is he using a 661?

  • @wharris7594
    @wharris7594 3 года назад

    S-212 Wildland Fire Chainsaw Class

  • @michaelkearney5562
    @michaelkearney5562 3 года назад +4

    11:46 That big tree broke into two pieces when it hit the ground. P.S. Looking at it again, it broke before it even hit the ground.

    • @BB46BB46
      @BB46BB46 2 года назад

      That is the sick and rorring tree thing

  • @lorenzolopez2466
    @lorenzolopez2466 2 года назад

    Ice house?

  • @garengtutorial8923
    @garengtutorial8923 Год назад

    Heyyy... 👍

  • @destroywoodusa
    @destroywoodusa 3 месяца назад

    Like🎉

  • @donaldwhite1928
    @donaldwhite1928 Год назад

    California pine the real trees

  • @Jona_Villa
    @Jona_Villa 3 года назад

    Is a Jeffrey Pine or Ponderosa pine?

  • @arnilazarev1771
    @arnilazarev1771 3 года назад +1

    🤝🤝🤝👍👍👍

  • @annafarley5188
    @annafarley5188 5 лет назад +3

    👍

  • @martinlawn
    @martinlawn 3 года назад

    Anybody have any idea how old that pine was ? 200 ? 400 years old ? I have no clue being from MN.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +3

      I would guess the 180-200ft Sugar pine taken at the end of the video would be between 300-500 year range. Which is pretty young considering we have a Giant Sequoia tree nearby that is over 2,700 years old! Also fun fact one of the oldest living trees in the world is located in California in the white mountains at close to 5000 years old! The methuselah tree , look it up @martinlawn

    • @martinlawn
      @martinlawn 3 года назад

      @@TommySchuch Sounds good. I always heard the "Bristlecone Pine" is the oldest tree in the USA. Some they say are 4000 years old and grow at a certain altitude and like on the SE side of slopes ? Odd.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад

      @@martinlawn Yes Exactly the tree I was talking about the "methusalah" tree I mentioned is a bristlecone pine. It's wild how long they can live for.

  • @marvinclark6808
    @marvinclark6808 3 года назад

    That one tree fell backwards shit happens sometimes

  • @TimberTramp
    @TimberTramp 2 года назад

    Pack your 084 to work day ;)

  • @jmajeed3880
    @jmajeed3880 3 года назад

    Miss axe men

  • @1979kw
    @1979kw Год назад

    Dead snags are one of the worst. Pound a wedge in it and the top breaks out and kills ya.
    Settem up and knock em down with something green lol

  • @ryanhudson3807
    @ryanhudson3807 3 года назад

    Yeah that last pondy was a toad. Id estimate it to be 180-250 yr old. No heart check.

  • @juanitarivera749
    @juanitarivera749 2 года назад +1

    Fucking amaIng

  • @luftgetrockneterleguan7744
    @luftgetrockneterleguan7744 3 года назад

    Hui die Bäume sind ja alle krank….

  • @nightfighter7452
    @nightfighter7452 2 года назад

    Is the crew looking for more employees?

  • @timothywhittier2725
    @timothywhittier2725 3 года назад

    Ko

  • @douglascasey3486
    @douglascasey3486 3 года назад +4

    I pride myself in never destroying small timber in the process of cutting the big timber. I don't like for my butts to pull out at all.

    • @GAIS414
      @GAIS414 3 года назад +4

      That's usually how the land owner and forest companies want it too. Here in Sweden it's considered unprofessional to waste timber like that. If you keep felling big on small for no good reason you will be out of a job very quickly.

    • @yearginclarke
      @yearginclarke 3 года назад +1

      Depends on what the skidding crew does also. You could fall it as perfectly as possible, but then a cat or skidder could fowl up the smaller trees in the process of skidding it out. I say this because I run skidder and do my best to not destroy the smaller trees, but in some situations it's very hard not to. Sometimes unforeseen things like sliding around or something lands your machine in a place where you tear up some smaller trees. I know how to avoid this usually, but alot of guys don't or just don't care. Largely depends on the operator.

    • @richardprosch6222
      @richardprosch6222 3 года назад +1

      you use the small timber to slow the big timber to the ground also if you cut the small timber and leave stumps the can slab the big stuff it will cost you big i worked the steep ground never got to work the flat ground like i see here.except when i put in my time in the rigging
      but we did pull in some big wood one was 12 ft by 12 ft 6inches by 26 ft long solid fir had 6 20 ft cuts before it went under 6 ft cheers boys you are under paid.

  • @user-vr6xc4dw6n
    @user-vr6xc4dw6n 2 года назад

    Какая это страна.

  • @tylerallison8584
    @tylerallison8584 3 года назад

    Baby face mcgee

  • @chriswesney
    @chriswesney 5 лет назад +2

    Why do they cut down all of these trees? Im by no means a tree hugger but I always feel weird seeing a 200 year old tree topple. These dudes have skills for sure.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  5 лет назад +8

      Chris Wesney These are mainly “hazard” trees near roads that are on their way out, most of which are infected with bark beetles or parasitic bugs. I guess the idea is to use the wood before it goes bad and or falls on the road and kills somebody. I hear you though, watching a massive tree hit the ground is definitely a weird feeling considering how long it’s been there.

    • @LordDirus007
      @LordDirus007 3 года назад +3

      It prevents Forrest fires.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  3 года назад +3

      @@LordDirus007 Yes sir

    • @jjp1117
      @jjp1117 3 года назад +3

      @@LordDirus007 but Smokey said only I could prevent forest fires

    • @benlager710
      @benlager710 3 года назад +2

      Ever wonder where the wood your house was built with came from

  • @robertosuareztolosa1659
    @robertosuareztolosa1659 3 года назад

    🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @keithclark486
    @keithclark486 2 года назад

    He was diagnosed with
    M&M&R.

  • @Bryant1963
    @Bryant1963 2 года назад +1

    Except that second tree you cut wasn’t a white fir or a piss fir, it was a Douglas-fir/red fir! I’ve cut timber for over 30 years & a Grand-fir is usually referred to as a piss fir, and some people even call Alpine fir piss fir, & grand fir & alpine fir are are both white fir, but at least the first 3 trees you cut were all red fir/Douglas fir, not white fir! Nice yellow pine at the end, but not sure why you dropped it into another tree though. Lol.

    • @TommySchuch
      @TommySchuch  2 года назад +1

      The tree was pissing pretty good, regardless of the specific fir it is. And he *usually calls these trees piss firs.

    • @Mudpuppyjunior
      @Mudpuppyjunior Год назад

      I don't know where you've been cutting the last 30 years but it wasn't this area.
      I did log this area for 30 years and those are white firs. Around here the only tree called a piss fir is a white fir. The needles and bark clearly make these white firs and neither Doug firs of which there are not too many below Yosemite nor red firs which grow at a higher elevation and have a much rougher, reddish-brown bark.

  • @jonathanarnot9810
    @jonathanarnot9810 2 года назад +1

    He smashed the shit out of that 10+ grand tree at 11:43

  • @jimwilliamson7598
    @jimwilliamson7598 3 года назад +3

    Can’t stand the gunning of the saw motor!

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 3 года назад +3

      He has to in order to keep oil circulating through bar & chain + fuel&oil through engine before and after extremely high loads.

    • @BrookieCooki84
      @BrookieCooki84 2 года назад +2

      @@ToreDL87 Don’t you just love when the RUclips experts give their 2 cents? Lol.

  • @team_1j_jont-179
    @team_1j_jont-179 3 года назад

    That stihl sounds sickly! Get yourself a 390xp and thank me later...

  • @skitzochik
    @skitzochik 3 года назад

    you're not scared a bear may come along?

    • @bristleconepinus2378
      @bristleconepinus2378 3 года назад

      not with that saw

    • @Bryant1963
      @Bryant1963 2 года назад

      😂🤣

    • @alphaduck2926
      @alphaduck2926 2 года назад

      @@bristleconepinus2378 That saw would literary go through a bear, but bears will usually sneak behind you and cut you wide open before you have time to react. They run up to 35 mph or so and can even climb trees. Good luck if the chain saw jams and also good luck trying to climb a tree or having someone acting as a lookout since bears can take down 3 or 5 guys with ease specially grizzly bears or black bears which are a lot smaller but still pack heat.

  • @need100k
    @need100k 2 года назад

    He revs that saw too much. Waste of gas, oil and wears out the engine faster. And I don't mean while in the big cuts, but before starting a cut and sometimes on the smaller cuts.

  • @mohammadyusri5567
    @mohammadyusri5567 3 года назад

    Ms880..