Do Dutchman's work falling timber. sometimes

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024
  • falling timber there are many things at your disposal , some work , some dont .
    buckinbillyray...

Комментарии • 106

  • @RuneCarverLLC
    @RuneCarverLLC 2 месяца назад +9

    I'm 62 and finally learned how to tie my shoes properly, thanks, Buckin'! 👍👍👍

  • @stephenmerrill4200
    @stephenmerrill4200 2 месяца назад +17

    I always watch these with my boys, 5 and 2, and when you interjected that "koo koo" after you mentioned you didn't have your wedges, my boy started cracking up. All I heard the rest of the video was "hey daddy, watch this.....KOOKOO!! Hey daddy, wanna know something?.....KOO KOO!!" lol thanks Buckin, love you all. Congrats Michael!

  • @ianbutler1983
    @ianbutler1983 2 месяца назад +11

    I appreciate I can watch your videos with my sons without worrying that you will start swearing. You are a good example to them. I think it is important to expose them to good men in person and online. Thanks.

    • @BuckinBillyRaySmith
      @BuckinBillyRaySmith  2 месяца назад +2

      You don’t know how important and humbled I am to be allowed in your home . And that’s a fact jack .. sincerely, love you guys say hi to the boys

  • @ryobrown-mcclain805
    @ryobrown-mcclain805 2 месяца назад +10

    From boot tying lessons, saving a little fir tree in the undergrowth, to Dutchman experiments, it don't get any better, thank you Buckin!

  • @savage22bolt32
    @savage22bolt32 2 месяца назад +1

    Watched that maple fall in slo-mo. Really interesting the way your dutchman put the counterclockwise spin on the tree.

  • @martyrutter3630
    @martyrutter3630 2 месяца назад +1

    Michael such a delight to see another deserving family will this saw. What a special moment for the whole channel family to be there with you. Blessings my friend. 🙏♥️♥️

  • @jimmyg6215
    @jimmyg6215 2 месяца назад +1

    Always amazed. Tying to learn as I got many trees to cut on my property. Always try to stay safe but sometimes they don’t go the way I want. Great to see an expert and hopefully I can put a small amount of your knowledge in my cuts.

    • @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE
      @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 2 месяца назад

      Welcome to the buckin army 🪖
      Spread the love
      Increase the peace
      Happy cuttin
      ✌️❤️🌲🪵🪓🐝

  • @Helga____
    @Helga____ 2 месяца назад +1

    Great example of the Dutchman, been curious for a long time just how much influence it can have on how the tree travels 😁

  • @jirusjirus9322
    @jirusjirus9322 2 месяца назад +1

    Buckin man you have me stoked with this video, ... reason being that this is the first time in a while I've seen you start the saw with your left arm.
    We like that you have been working hard on your injury rehab. 💪

  • @saltrock9642
    @saltrock9642 2 месяца назад +2

    This was another wonderful episode of “Buckin Billy Ray’s Trees, Saws, Trucks, Friends, Inspiration and Everyday Life Show”. Get dirty, friends.

  • @DevonReeley
    @DevonReeley 2 месяца назад

    Much love Buckin!! Always learning something❤️🪵

  • @bjrnerastrefelling2514
    @bjrnerastrefelling2514 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks buckin! You're the absolute man. - Norway is watching!

    • @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE
      @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 2 месяца назад

      Welcome to the buckin army 🪖
      Spread the love
      Increase the peace
      ✌️❤️🌲🪵🪓🐝

  • @martyrutter3630
    @martyrutter3630 2 месяца назад +1

    Nice slow shot of a cutting technique most of us have never seen up close. 👍👍👍

  • @danbarth9421
    @danbarth9421 2 месяца назад +1

    Cool blurp on the Dutchman!! Nice job!! I can't wait to put those false tongues on my boots!! Rituals!! Awesome to see Michael win that saw, as much as we all wanted it...well, yet again it went to the right person💪💪❤️🪓🪵🌳much respect for ya brother, love from the Barth household😊😊

  • @CraigArndt
    @CraigArndt 2 месяца назад +1

    Congratulations Michael!!

  • @Timberjack.loggers
    @Timberjack.loggers 2 месяца назад +2

    Good job not loosing that maple good judgement with distance to your truck that looked like an old logging brow grown up with old sticks pushed up interesting to watch love the content !

  • @trappedinkalifornee
    @trappedinkalifornee 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for the Dutchmen class!👍🏼👍🏼

  • @davidthomas5997
    @davidthomas5997 2 месяца назад

    Loved seeing you manipulate the smaller diameter wood to make it go where you want. Thanks.

  • @D-EagleMachines-on6dg
    @D-EagleMachines-on6dg 2 месяца назад +1

    Dutchmen are skilled at cutting timber.

  • @doglegjake6788
    @doglegjake6788 2 месяца назад +1

    Rumor has it this dude has a grizzly bear rug in his living room but the problem is it's not dead ,, it's just afraid to move

    • @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE
      @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 2 месяца назад

      When buckins away the bear will play forget the cat and mice hehe
      ✌️❤️🌲🪵🪓🐝

  • @northpole9311
    @northpole9311 2 месяца назад

    They have horse whisperers but in the woods of Vancouver island there be a tree whisperer cause I didn’t think she was gonna go that way 👍

  • @user-bm2wv6gv7w
    @user-bm2wv6gv7w 2 месяца назад

    Hi Buckin . Great Video as always. I enjoy your videos and I’m always learning something new

  • @osagejon8972
    @osagejon8972 2 месяца назад

    Nice work there with the dutchman BBR. I use them sometimes but only when I want a tree somewhere but its ok if it ends up somewhere else.

  • @daveditner8505
    @daveditner8505 2 месяца назад

    I like the Costco socks. I run them too

  • @Alexhulk
    @Alexhulk 2 месяца назад

    Nice video tanks

  • @horseclawdestroyerofworlds5294
    @horseclawdestroyerofworlds5294 2 месяца назад +1

    always got at least stuff 1 in the back pocket

  • @gregtaylor8327
    @gregtaylor8327 2 месяца назад

    I gotta say my Man you freakin nailed that one. The low wood gets me sometimes. It makes way more sense to me now. Beautiful. Thanks Buckin.

  • @StephenRempe-hr2le
    @StephenRempe-hr2le 2 месяца назад

    well done, good Sir!! ✌️👌❤️🪓😃

  • @davidhuffine5084
    @davidhuffine5084 2 месяца назад

    B
    Nice job on the rotten maple . Glad you are HAPPY . Iam happy for you .Being happy is beetr than than being unhappy .

  • @scottwilson4396
    @scottwilson4396 2 месяца назад

    That was interesting work there Buckin ! Always something different to be considered

  • @joshuaearnheart2756
    @joshuaearnheart2756 2 месяца назад +2

    You should try out the neotec saws. Build a pipe for it so I can buy one from you. Mine has been in some big wood and it runs hard. Plus they’re on sale for $209. Not bad for a 72cc

    • @clintbliss2046
      @clintbliss2046 2 месяца назад

      Couple weeks ago I got one on Amazon for 180. NH872. Powerhead.

    • @joshuaearnheart2756
      @joshuaearnheart2756 2 месяца назад

      @@clintbliss2046 I have the ns872. With a 25” bar and chain. Got it for like $369 about a year ago. Been beating on it since then. It cuts good but the nh is advertised at a touch more power

    • @clintbliss2046
      @clintbliss2046 2 месяца назад +1

      @@joshuaearnheart2756 nice. I remember using an 038 that had the muffler opened up and it was a lot of fun to run. Definitely throw some chips.

  • @br-dj2ti
    @br-dj2ti 2 месяца назад

    God bless bucking stay safe my friend

  • @troyerthedestroyer
    @troyerthedestroyer 2 месяца назад

    Dutchman, sizzwheel, both have their places and at least for me they tend to be worth doing when you have the opportunity.

  • @virginiahunter1456
    @virginiahunter1456 2 месяца назад

    Buckin, new tshirt. "Never trust a dutchmen" haha

  • @critterg8493
    @critterg8493 2 месяца назад +2

    What a great live feed yesterday friends

  • @TheTritan408
    @TheTritan408 2 месяца назад +1

    Just found your channel, Can you do a video of you next to a fire pit burning wood and talking about life experiences? I would watch it every night before going to to sleep. Thanks 🙏

    • @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE
      @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 2 месяца назад

      Welcome to the buckin army 🪖
      Spread the love
      Increase the peace
      Check out some of buckins other videos have a good day
      ✌️❤️🌲🪵🪓🐝

  • @Alexhulk
    @Alexhulk 2 месяца назад

    Maple strong wood....but heavy ❤

  • @petermccuskey1832
    @petermccuskey1832 2 месяца назад

    Super nice work!

  • @O-Hymark
    @O-Hymark 2 месяца назад

    That was a beauty of a video.

  • @Hankinta_Jari
    @Hankinta_Jari 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for sharing this deep cut. Time to think, not rush.😊 Chain oil pump is inaf this bar/chain?

  • @Alexhulk
    @Alexhulk 2 месяца назад +1

    Happy Michael

  • @crowtubecrozier2857
    @crowtubecrozier2857 2 месяца назад

    Nice job

  • @leonardvirtue5753
    @leonardvirtue5753 2 месяца назад +1

    I’m all ways here teacher 🎉🤠👌👌🤙 sometimes I do not comment always a thumbs up 🎉🎉🎉👍👍👍👍👍🪓🪵🤠💪💯💯🤩Nice 😊

    • @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE
      @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 2 месяца назад

      The one ☝️ the only Leonard virtue!
      Love ya brother!
      Have a peaceful day!
      Happy cuttin
      ✌️❤️🌲🪵🪓🐝

    • @BuckinBillyRaySmith
      @BuckinBillyRaySmith  2 месяца назад +1

      You rock!

    • @leonardvirtue5753
      @leonardvirtue5753 2 месяца назад

      @@BuckinBillyRaySmith 🤠👍

  • @DM56fmx
    @DM56fmx 2 месяца назад +1

    12:09 💪💪

  • @daviddavies9996
    @daviddavies9996 2 месяца назад

    Great video and tips but that interjection made me really laugh 🤣🤣 cuckoo

  • @palmeredwards7138
    @palmeredwards7138 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for the video.

  • @aaronwendt-smith5910
    @aaronwendt-smith5910 2 месяца назад

    Very cool. What do you think about the vertical cut in front of the hinge on the high side to give it a stronger top side of the hinge?

  • @920724danti
    @920724danti 2 месяца назад

    well done on a difficult one!

  • @stevetheriault4164
    @stevetheriault4164 2 месяца назад

    I THOUGHT THAT OLD STUMP WAS AN OUTHOUSE 😆😆😆😆,,HOPE ALL IS WELL WITH EVERYONE STAY SAFE

  • @robert4027
    @robert4027 2 месяца назад

    that poor little tree didn't hurt anyone and you killed it. ☹️

  • @d.ahwooomazenkas8075
    @d.ahwooomazenkas8075 2 месяца назад

    Ahwoooo get one 👍❤️🌲

  • @Alexhulk
    @Alexhulk 2 месяца назад

    No dutchman for me.

  • @rickstafford5316
    @rickstafford5316 2 месяца назад

    Nice sidehill

  • @steely1neverwane
    @steely1neverwane 2 месяца назад +1

    All the best to everyone

  • @johnvelas70
    @johnvelas70 2 месяца назад

    I just heard some good news:
    I actually have better table manners than my friends 1 year old niece.

  • @zachearley1906
    @zachearley1906 2 месяца назад

    What saw are you running Buckin?

  • @anglingmailbox3236
    @anglingmailbox3236 2 месяца назад

    Elm timber, don't know if it exists on western Pacific States (I'm told by the old timer's that horse cart wheels were built using the Elm to create timber spokes that were strong and would last). I use the 585 and 592 type saws whenever I go near the wood. The main reason I mention it, it is found getting too large alongside sheds and farms frequently, as it spreads very deftly along agricultural hedgerows and will crowd out you nice hedgerow types of species, with it's reach and thick green canopy. The Elm tree canopy just monopolizes all of the available sunlight, and it doesn't share any with anything else. Hence the 12 inch plus size of trunks, which is also like steel to cut through using any saw. It's the one instane where I don't even bother with 70cc and just reach for 80 plus. I had a lean-er that wanted to crush a small barn, and was smack against it too. Which I persuaded to go the other way. It was one of those, that you look at the weight of 15 foot of heavy trunk and you understand the weight in it (I tend to cut high in those instance, insteaad of low, in order to topple it against the lean). However, I made best use of available saw-able timber, I'd have to pull it with a cable and cut lower down. I've left a lot of that timber in stumps over the years.

    • @anglingmailbox3236
      @anglingmailbox3236 2 месяца назад

      Lately I visited an Elm stump which I recall my father before me saw up years ago, after it fell in storm. And the stump diameter of the Elm was around three feet. And that's a species as I say in western European Atlantic conditions that spreads along hedge rows. We don't have forest left as such any longer, it was harvested over a century ago and cleared.

    • @anglingmailbox3236
      @anglingmailbox3236 2 месяца назад

      The other reason I would underline the Elm as an example of a deciduous tree type. Is sure, when the trunk is on the ground I would lay down the 80 or 90 cc tool, and select my best, sharpest 70 cc tool in order to study the timber I now have flat. Because, when you're dealing with lightweight species of timber, even full of sap. When you cut the wrong limbs the wrong way, the sideways roll thing can become un-predicable. And I can argue, it's one of the most sensible reasons to own a 562 for example. You sometimes need with a species like the Elm wood, when it's flat on the floor. A saw that you can take away some of that thick canopy and study what you've got (a saw that has enough juice and will give you the run time, so you can take your time and study what you're dealing with). The reason I mention it, is an Elm wood timber of 15 to 20 feet length, larger than a foot diameter. With rest in strange ways on it's extra strong limbs. And if you don't stand on the right side and take you're time. You can easily end up rolling the log back in your own direction. Even when you have these heavy deciduous trees 'tamed' you think, and flat on the floor. They still have hard lessons to teach you even then. The smaller, long run-time sixty plus or seventy CM3 class tool, is what to use (having also benefitted from those 80 plus class instruments to get you're felling cuts complete). A lot of these trees are really a two-saw deal, to un-ravel the puzzle all of the ways.

    • @anglingmailbox3236
      @anglingmailbox3236 2 месяца назад

      I haven't done any Maple wood stands or anything. Just the species one comes across in western Europe (and we don't have unlimited amounts of timber left at all). But one learns after time to learn the unique personality of each type of standing timber from a felling point of view. Each timber species, from a felling point of view, has it's own characteristic plot. Actually some of the worst bar pinch situations I've encountered was with scrub wood on the hedgerows with things like Elder berry bushes, that can become small trees and fall over in storms. Again, that horizontal flat lying timber can be extremely tricky to negotiate with the saw, unless you have experience and you understand them. Scrub species can become overgrown in time too in gardens that are left for fifty years. I have come across miniature oak scrub specimens in those cases, that aren't so miniature after that time. The oak tree is a very unique and different species again. With it's own unique character (all of the different tree species 'speak' to the cutting tools and saws differently). Cutting pine or a certain size, is nothing like cutting poplar wood of that scale. Or Elm wood, is very much it's own unique thing.

    • @anglingmailbox3236
      @anglingmailbox3236 2 месяца назад

      By the way, with the Elm wood species and in hedgerows that require managment. Whenever and wherever you have to physically negoitate you're way through bushes to access a standing Elm wood tree, that could have a huge trunk on it, which leans in all kinds of directions. The Husky 540 type of tool, which I added to my set after years of not having that type of saw. Is great in the same was as the 550 or 560 types of saws. Why? It just allows one to have that time around the standing timber that you need to think about a strategy. And learn something about what you're dealing with. I did this clearance work without power saws for years. But I find with a 540 tool and some other lightweight saws, for hedgerow taming and hedgerow management. Those smaller sub- 70cc tools are essential. In order to carry out the survey and investigation (whilst not being under the pressure to start sawing into trunk wood straight away). It would be nice maybe to see how Billy tackles the situation I mention. My hunch is that he'll still pick up a 562 at least, and a 32 inch bar.

    • @anglingmailbox3236
      @anglingmailbox3236 2 месяца назад

      On the subject of the 32 inch bar on the 562 saw, what's really happening with a longer bar is that one is slowing down the chain speed. As far as the sawing of wood is concerned for that particular tool. You shorten you're bar by two inches or more, and you find your saw doesn't magically increase in horsepower, but it does gain access to a way more chain cutting velocity. If one doesn't understand it, take a Husky 435 or some low-powered 40cc tool like that. And try a longer 18-inch bar in some timber and see what happens. Those 40cc tools lack the chain velocity even with the stubby, short length bars. Yet they'll manage to saw through timber to some extent with the shorter sub- 18-inch length bars. And when you increase the bar length, you lose that chain velocity very quickly. It's away more appreciable with the smaller saws, and with large powerful saws. The relationship between the speed of the chain, what that means from a wood sawing perspective, and the length of the bar you select. It is non--trivial. The Husky 540 saw for example, you will really notice the impact of bar length on that kind of tool. Even with the 'mini' three-eighth inch chain, which masks the impact somewhat on the Husky 540, versus the 435. There's a reason a 540 has a short bar, so it maintains the velocity of chain needed in order to operate. What Billy's doing with longer bars on the Husky 562, is he's trying to slow down the chain velocity. So the tool is not as angry as it otherwise would be.

  • @seanjohnson6263
    @seanjohnson6263 2 месяца назад

    That was good work Buckin

  • @SteveRogers370
    @SteveRogers370 2 месяца назад +1

    Howdy!

  • @andrebruinhorst5565
    @andrebruinhorst5565 2 месяца назад

    Where does the 'Dutchman' name come from? Who introduced it in the chainsaw industry? As a Dutchman myself, I'm not happy with being asociatated with a negative thing/wrong executed cut!! 😂

  • @Sumdaiyze
    @Sumdaiyze 2 месяца назад

    Buckin have you ran the T540xp Mark III at all?

  • @Dunlap-uj5zl
    @Dunlap-uj5zl 2 месяца назад

    👍

  • @eddyarundale1566
    @eddyarundale1566 2 месяца назад

    👋🏼

  • @JoshSmith-vj3yb
    @JoshSmith-vj3yb 2 месяца назад

    I'd have a thousand ticks on me if I wer in tall brush like that cutting here in NW Ohio

  • @Alexhulk
    @Alexhulk 2 месяца назад

    Risky

  • @1944chevytruck
    @1944chevytruck 2 месяца назад +1

    BE KINDER

  • @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE
    @MATT.MAN-PEACE-LOVE 2 месяца назад

    Can ya do a shaaaklankaroni a shake of the foot🦶and tie a loggers knot🪢 with no hands 🙌
    ✌️❤️🌲🪵🪓🐝

    • @AaronTheViking250
      @AaronTheViking250 2 месяца назад +1

      that was mouthful, but knowing bucking, he might just try that Matt man.

  • @butchssurvivorranch360
    @butchssurvivorranch360 2 месяца назад

    Legendary video as usual 👍... 🪵 🪓 wedge KOOKOO lol🤪