The bit about being scared while chopping wood.... So real. Arborists die very frequently. It's a very dangerous job. Thank you for being real. Real men get scared, we just have to learn to deal with the fear and use it to keep us and our families and buddies alive.
Thank you for making this video Thoren! Great tool and technique pack for those starting :) Also, people is not ready to hear or understand tree felling and harvesting the same way they were not ready to watch the process of killing animals, while they want to enjoy eating some tasty meat. I've just started this year's to process my own firewood and hopefully for others next year and it's key to understand what to do and how to tell whether a tree is dead, diseased, or invasive, from a tree that should remain where it is. Thanks again, and keep throwing this type of content, it's great! ❤🔥
I love your commentary. You only fall dead diseased trees, you get permits, hand tool shown rather than fancy, he-man chainsaws. Must admit I recently purchased a fancy, he-man chainsaw.
Need knee surgery, hip surgery, back surgery, and a shoulder surgery... Most days I'm either bedridden or in a wheelchair but when I can stand to put weight on my hips I still split wood for heat every winter. Takes 45 minutes to crawl the 25 feet back into the house afterwards but its not going to split itself. Its the bending and lifting that my hips knees back and shoulder can't take, the swinging of the axe is the easy part. I have gas splitters and winches but they require more bending and lifting than just good old fashioned swinging of an eight pounder. My body maybe failing but ill keep swinging until its my time Thank you for your videos as some of us need all the inspiration we can get
Thank you for the tip that you can get permits to source wood from forests; that's great to know! I've also gotten round from chipdrop, a site that connects landscaping and other tree-management companies with folks who want wood products (so the landscapers don't have to pay to haul it to the waste facility, and you don't have to pay to buy it from a lumberyard or forest, and you don't have to harvest it yourself). It's free, too, but you get what you pay for; rounds may not be cut to good lengths and may not be flat like the video mentions, and they may give you more than you wanted. Still, if you're looking for logs to practice on or just something to burn, it can be a great resource if they cover your region!
I love your videos as they remind me of home, my grand father was a wood cutter and owned his own lot up until this year when he had to give it up at 87. I wish I had of thought more seriously about taking it over for him before it was to late 😢
You have great hair. Handsome, too. I like when you have tutorials and Q&A. I call digging holes, shoveling dirt and mulch and axing my way through tree roots exercise. Feels like it to me. I am 69 years old.
I've always preferred a straight up and down stroke for all day chopping. When the axe/maul head is significantly behind your own head you lose an element of control, it takes more energy to drag the axe back up to the vertical and tires you out quicker.
I realised while splitting that rotation left/right of my left hand was what determined my aim. If on the down swing, I rotated that wrist, my aim would skew. For those wanting to add to Thoren keep that left wrist rigid and straight. Crazy how people don't like to see a tree cut down, but can't make the connection to round ready to be split.
Maybe i missed it and it seems intuitive but for those who are new to swinging a splitting maul a nice wide stance is quite helpful and your shins will thank you
I put down the maul for splitting-Once I picked up a vintage plumb tassie it was a wrap. They do so nice in the red oak I harvest. I enjoy the council tool/whisky river 5lber too.
Good video. I would have added some tips about where to hit the rounds (like some species you need to split off the edges, not straight down the middle). A lot of time when I get questions from friends I find them hitting grain as weird angles or trying to split huge logs down the middle.
Hell ye great vid! Also, been wondering if you’d ever do a vid about things people do in the lumberjack world championships (sawing, chopping, speed climbing, etc). It’d be very fun too see and maybe some fun content too. Nevertheless, love this stuff!
Hello from France, I absolutely loved the tutorial part of the video. I have split a bit of wood myself, but it turns out I didn't use proper technique. 😑And I admit I often had to work my way with badly cut pieces of Pinus halepensis or aleppo pine, common in mediterranean France (I did not cut them myself, I was too young for that), with knots in them.🤐 For what comes, I'm sorry for the long read. For those willing to, please enjoy !!!😃 Don't worry I'm not hating. 😉 As for the second part, I'll have to strongly disagree with what you said about harvesting standing and fallen-down deadwood being good for the forest !!! Depending on the type of disease, that also goes for ill trees. At least if you're talking about a non-monospecific, kind of natural forest. I am a masters student in Ecology and Ecosystem functioning in Besançon, France. Before I did a Bachelor in the university of Marseille (AMU). I feel obliged to tell you that having standing dead and very old, sick, hardwood trees and also fallen-down dead trees in the forest is ESSENTIAL for it's biodiversity, as it creates new ecological niches for detritivorous insects and coleopterans, as well as different species of birds, ants, small mammals, funghi, bacteria etc in the standing dead trees.👌 It also provides the forest floor, after decomposition, with new nutrients that will refertilise the soil for the next generation of trees that will come in the place of the fallen one.💪 When we think of how a forest works in nature, we have to rid ourselves from the human bias that is time perception. Forests don't evolve on a human timescale, they are way slower, especially well established oak forests and basically any forest of slow growing species.🕰 Of course, I have to moderate my statement, for example if you're harvesting your wood from a forest that has been subject to a wildfire a year before, there will be enough dead wood for your harvesting not to be a bother , or if you're getting wood from a parcel of forest where a plague of a certain parasite has killed like 50% of the trees, then yes, sure, take the wood, or at least what you need. There will be plenty then. 😵 What I'm saying is, It's very important to also have very old trees in a forest, as well as dead trees, trees with hollow trunks, and oh yeah also ill trees, as long as it's not a vulnerable species in a population of low genetic diversity.🤕🤒 It's also very important that the forest is multispecific, or in other terms, rich in species diversity. Tree species, but also undergrowth species, and that there be an age diversity among the trees of the forest. A mix of trees of all ages. As for Invasive species of trees and specimens affected by a plague caused by an exogenous parasite, I'll have to strongly AGREEwith you again. Harvesting them is GOOD for the forest, and I must applaud your efforts on that part.👌👍 But again I have to nuance my statement 🙃. Nothing is ever as simple in ecology. Nature is awesome.😯 If it's an invasive species that resprouts very strongly when cut, then cutting it once will not be enough to kill the tree. You'll have to come back cutting that tree's resprouts for 3, 4 or 5 consecutive years, until the tree hasn't got enough energy left to resprout. Otherwise, it will be strenghthened by cutting it, instead of killed.🥴 I more generally applaud you for using wood as a heating medium, as it is renewable at the scale of one or two human lives, and it is one on the only ways of heating that are so, on top of having, if managed correctly from an ecological perspective, little impact on the ecosystem, and needing no rare metals or unrenewable substances, like semiconductors for solar panels, or huge amounts of steel and copper for wind turbines and electrical wires. The more so in a well insulated house, that is not too big according to it's occupants' number, thus easy to heat. Better even if you have an efficient woodstove, that can even be connected to some radiators, that work with a closed watersystem that gets heated by the woodstove and a closed watercirculation system with a small electrical pump. 👌👍💪 Thanks for reading for the courageous ones. I appreciate it very much !!! 🤩🙏
Not sure if it's worth noting, or maybe it's obvious. But the body position(s) when you're swinging the axe is pretty similar to deadlifting and kettlebell swinging. Just kind of applying the force in the opposite direction. Fun fact, more or less.
My dad once used a wedge and part of it burst into his arm. That part of it entered his vein on arm. There was a lot of blood. I used to use it and it's dangerous but sometimes you have to use it.
This was my day splitting red oak and hard maple with the x25 alien 6 pound maul and the fiskars 8 pound maul and the Helco Tasmanian for the straight grain stuff!!!
Love the videos, if you like beer please try Belgian beer! You'll love it and the choice is infinite triple karmeliet, chouffe, chimay, etc, I can recommend more if you want
Thank you for at least explaining how to use a wedge correctly I had a incident with a wedge coming out of a peace of gum and has caved in one side of my face and realistically lucky to be alive as it hit me on the blunt side and no the sharp. A lot of wood cutters/splitters will rave on about a wedge but without using proper technique
Axe head should not be pointing back toward you at point of impact. Should be coming straight down. Aka you have a far better chance of keeping your shins and feet for life.
6 ft, 200 lbs is small? Haha wasn't it little john in robinhood portrayed as a huge guy that in reality was like 6 foot/200? Can't remember who I'm thinking of but realistically, being about the same height and weight, we are considered tall/big when traveling to other parts of the world!
I split a lot of green eucaliptus, weird, alien looking thing! Grows like cancer too, cut em down and back they come. Just good for pulp and firewood, crackles and pops a lot, really hot burning when dry, no embers, just snowy powdery ashes. Cheers from chile, mapuche country
Hey Thor, we need to see a video eventually where you can just use your bare hands to rip a log in half ruclips.net/video/U0SqKxOo_44/видео.htmlsi=dJ27EOyi3JRugtxR
Guinness Draft? Extra stout is the only way to go. Splitting wood will not get you jacked if you wanna get jacked follow me and I'll explain it to you from A to Z.
I like to use the X27 size axe with its ultra-light hollow handle for kindling. I don't own a hatchet, probably never will. Personally I think they encourage dangerous behavior: ruclips.net/video/RpiHvPr2HnA/видео.html
RUclips NEVER shows me any of your videos in my feed even tho I am subbed and have the bell set to show all.. Even a channel like yours, youtube still f*#%s you. so sad because they're doing it to a lot of people. I sadly almost forgot you make videos.
@ThorenBradley some people just have to try and cause problems to make themselves feel better. Don't sweat the haters man. You put out good content keep it up brother.
I've lived in the Sierra's for 10 years and I fell and split all my Firewood by hand. I can bust out a cord pretty quick. We should have a friendly competition. 😁
The bit about being scared while chopping wood.... So real. Arborists die very frequently. It's a very dangerous job. Thank you for being real. Real men get scared, we just have to learn to deal with the fear and use it to keep us and our families and buddies alive.
Well known lifelong arborist on youtube died not too long ago from an accident
100% Even a little branch falling can be a problem. A big heavy branch or god forbid the main tree itself is just deadly business.
Clear, concise, and informative - thanks, Thoren!
❤
Yes. I'm Brazilian getting understand the english of this dude perfectly.
Thank you for making this video Thoren! Great tool and technique pack for those starting :)
Also, people is not ready to hear or understand tree felling and harvesting the same way they were not ready to watch the process of killing animals, while they want to enjoy eating some tasty meat.
I've just started this year's to process my own firewood and hopefully for others next year and it's key to understand what to do and how to tell whether a tree is dead, diseased, or invasive, from a tree that should remain where it is.
Thanks again, and keep throwing this type of content, it's great!
❤🔥
you seem like a kind, humble man! and you are indeed jacked 😂 keep on keepin on brother!
I love your commentary. You only fall dead diseased trees, you get permits, hand tool shown rather than fancy, he-man chainsaws.
Must admit I recently purchased a fancy, he-man chainsaw.
Need knee surgery, hip surgery, back surgery, and a shoulder surgery... Most days I'm either bedridden or in a wheelchair but when I can stand to put weight on my hips I still split wood for heat every winter. Takes 45 minutes to crawl the 25 feet back into the house afterwards but its not going to split itself. Its the bending and lifting that my hips knees back and shoulder can't take, the swinging of the axe is the easy part. I have gas splitters and winches but they require more bending and lifting than just good old fashioned swinging of an eight pounder. My body maybe failing but ill keep swinging until its my time
Thank you for your videos as some of us need all the inspiration we can get
My favorite of your videos! Loved the humbleness and q and a!
Great video Thoren 🎉
You’re a very good instructor. Thanks for the lesson and also for the personal information. It’s nice to learn more about you. 😊
Thank you for the tip that you can get permits to source wood from forests; that's great to know! I've also gotten round from chipdrop, a site that connects landscaping and other tree-management companies with folks who want wood products (so the landscapers don't have to pay to haul it to the waste facility, and you don't have to pay to buy it from a lumberyard or forest, and you don't have to harvest it yourself). It's free, too, but you get what you pay for; rounds may not be cut to good lengths and may not be flat like the video mentions, and they may give you more than you wanted. Still, if you're looking for logs to practice on or just something to burn, it can be a great resource if they cover your region!
I love your videos as they remind me of home, my grand father was a wood cutter and owned his own lot up until this year when he had to give it up at 87. I wish I had of thought more seriously about taking it over for him before it was to late 😢
You have great hair. Handsome, too. I like when you have tutorials and Q&A. I call digging holes, shoveling dirt and mulch and axing my way through tree roots exercise. Feels like it to me. I am 69 years old.
Need your review even on hatchet cause out there I've not found nobody that make video review like you 🙌🏽🙌🏽
My brother I usually never comment but you are awesome keep up the good work you seems pretty honest and well mannered and a great role model!
I've always preferred a straight up and down stroke for all day chopping. When the axe/maul head is significantly behind your own head you lose an element of control, it takes more energy to drag the axe back up to the vertical and tires you out quicker.
loved the bts view the Q&A provided 👏
I realised while splitting that rotation left/right of my left hand was what determined my aim. If on the down swing, I rotated that wrist, my aim would skew. For those wanting to add to Thoren keep that left wrist rigid and straight.
Crazy how people don't like to see a tree cut down, but can't make the connection to round ready to be split.
Thank you for sharing more of you with us all 💖
Maybe i missed it and it seems intuitive but for those who are new to swinging a splitting maul a nice wide stance is quite helpful and your shins will thank you
I put down the maul for splitting-Once I picked up a vintage plumb tassie it was a wrap. They do so nice in the red oak I harvest.
I enjoy the council tool/whisky river 5lber too.
Can you please do a review on the cheap 8 pound Estwing splitting maul. More power to you.
I’ll search for one!
@@ThorenBradley Thanks! We'll look forward to it. Can't wait to see that cheap Estwing 8 pound splitting maul with 36" hickory wood handle in action.
Good video. I would have added some tips about where to hit the rounds (like some species you need to split off the edges, not straight down the middle). A lot of time when I get questions from friends I find them hitting grain as weird angles or trying to split huge logs down the middle.
Hell ye great vid! Also, been wondering if you’d ever do a vid about things people do in the lumberjack world championships (sawing, chopping, speed climbing, etc). It’d be very fun too see and maybe some fun content too. Nevertheless, love this stuff!
Nice job editing with the blinking colors.
Hell yea I got a response! Actually helpful too bc I’ve been wondering about permits for harvesting wood. Thanks Thoren, godspeed 🙏🙏
Hello from France, I absolutely loved the tutorial part of the video. I have split a bit of wood myself, but it turns out I didn't use proper technique. 😑And I admit I often had to work my way with badly cut pieces of Pinus halepensis or aleppo pine, common in mediterranean France (I did not cut them myself, I was too young for that), with knots in them.🤐
For what comes, I'm sorry for the long read. For those willing to, please enjoy !!!😃
Don't worry I'm not hating. 😉
As for the second part, I'll have to strongly disagree with what you said about harvesting standing and fallen-down deadwood being good for the forest !!! Depending on the type of disease, that also goes for ill trees. At least if you're talking about a non-monospecific, kind of natural forest.
I am a masters student in Ecology and Ecosystem functioning in Besançon, France. Before I did a Bachelor in the university of Marseille (AMU).
I feel obliged to tell you that having standing dead and very old, sick, hardwood trees and also fallen-down dead trees in the forest is ESSENTIAL for it's biodiversity, as it creates new ecological niches for detritivorous insects and coleopterans, as well as different species of birds, ants, small mammals, funghi, bacteria etc in the standing dead trees.👌
It also provides the forest floor, after decomposition, with new nutrients that will refertilise the soil for the next generation of trees that will come in the place of the fallen one.💪
When we think of how a forest works in nature, we have to rid ourselves from the human bias that is time perception. Forests don't evolve on a human timescale, they are way slower, especially well established oak forests and basically any forest of slow growing species.🕰
Of course, I have to moderate my statement, for example if you're harvesting your wood from a forest that has been subject to a wildfire a year before, there will be enough dead wood for your harvesting not to be a bother , or if you're getting wood from a parcel of forest where a plague of a certain parasite has killed like 50% of the trees, then yes, sure, take the wood, or at least what you need. There will be plenty then. 😵
What I'm saying is, It's very important to also have very old trees in a forest, as well as dead trees, trees with hollow trunks, and oh yeah also ill trees, as long as it's not a vulnerable species in a population of low genetic diversity.🤕🤒
It's also very important that the forest is multispecific, or in other terms, rich in species diversity. Tree species, but also undergrowth species, and that there be an age diversity among the trees of the forest. A mix of trees of all ages.
As for Invasive species of trees and specimens affected by a plague caused by an exogenous parasite, I'll have to strongly AGREEwith you again. Harvesting them is GOOD for the forest, and I must applaud your efforts on that part.👌👍
But again I have to nuance my statement 🙃. Nothing is ever as simple in ecology. Nature is awesome.😯 If it's an invasive species that resprouts very strongly when cut, then cutting it once will not be enough to kill the tree. You'll have to come back cutting that tree's resprouts for 3, 4 or 5 consecutive years, until the tree hasn't got enough energy left to resprout. Otherwise, it will be strenghthened by cutting it, instead of killed.🥴
I more generally applaud you for using wood as a heating medium, as it is renewable at the scale of one or two human lives, and it is one on the only ways of heating that are so, on top of having, if managed correctly from an ecological perspective, little impact on the ecosystem, and needing no rare metals or unrenewable substances, like semiconductors for solar panels, or huge amounts of steel and copper for wind turbines and electrical wires. The more so in a well insulated house, that is not too big according to it's occupants' number, thus easy to heat.
Better even if you have an efficient woodstove, that can even be connected to some radiators, that work with a closed watersystem that gets heated by the woodstove and a closed watercirculation system with a small electrical pump. 👌👍💪
Thanks for reading for the courageous ones. I appreciate it very much !!! 🤩🙏
Awesome video bro!
Glad you liked it! Have an amazing day
@ThorenBradley You too brother! Keep up the great work!
Like your content. Did I just see you in a wayfair add on tv?
Perfect and Clear Instructions 👌 🔥
Not sure if it's worth noting, or maybe it's obvious. But the body position(s) when you're swinging the axe is pretty similar to deadlifting and kettlebell swinging. Just kind of applying the force in the opposite direction. Fun fact, more or less.
you are right about helmets getting sensitive about cutting trees down always makes me chuckle
Thank you for the good tips. This will help a lot
Do you recommend wearing steel toe boots when splitting wood?
I love your videos man, good job
Excellent information thank you......
What boots you wearing? Those Redwing Mocs?
My dad once used a wedge and part of it burst into his arm. That part of it entered his vein on arm. There was a lot of blood. I used to use it and it's dangerous but sometimes you have to use it.
helpful, thank you
This was my day splitting red oak and hard maple with the x25 alien 6 pound maul and the fiskars 8 pound maul and the Helco Tasmanian for the straight grain stuff!!!
Would love to see you going out and harvesting more wood and driving your truck like you did in that videos little while ago
Love the videos, if you like beer please try Belgian beer! You'll love it and the choice is infinite triple karmeliet, chouffe, chimay, etc, I can recommend more if you want
Very informational great job
How do you like that Halder maul? I couldn't decide between the Simplex, and the Helko Saxon splitter. So, I got both.
I get the axe over head so it's weightless then let my arms drop but snap those wrists. Like a golf swing.
Thanks, I've been wondering the proper way to do this. have lots of excess trees around my house and many friends and family due to hurricane Helene.
Did I just see you on a Wayfair commercial?!
You ever been asked to be on Joe Rogan? Would love to see that.
Great video, thanks Thoren! You're a beast bro.
I find a good machete works fantastic for kindling as well. Great video
@Thorenbradley Why don't you ever switch side you hit from?
Let them know Thoren!
Keep up the good work!
Love the new home gym ❤😊 the other one was better 100!!!
What is the best way to split beefy rounds that "Y"? Love your shit, hope to hear your thoughts
Is it faster to drop the axe on the ground between logs, or to leave it standing against something while you grab another log ?
It's always faster to switch to a smaller axe
Switching to your pistol is always faster than reloading
Grab a stopwatch and experiment 🤷🏼♂️
What is your #1 choice (that is currently available) for a splitting maul??!
Anybody know what state this is in looks really peaceful
you got a follow from me right after you said you drink coor's. haha
2:36 I've been doing that FOR SOO LONG
Hello, what brand are the hatchet, axes and the wedge you’re using in the video? Please advise. Thx
Hatched looked like hultafors, axe is Fiskars x27
(Had to correct axe name)
should check out buckin billy ray, after 25-30 years in the tree service/wood industry has more productive and efficient wood splitting pointers.
What is the easiest wood to split? what is the hardest wood to split?
Imagine if Thoren got a low taper fade
How do you handle it if you're wood is an ant nest and a big one?
seen you in a wayfair add brother
You should try adlers axes
Thank you, their heads will never stand a chance!
Thank you for at least explaining how to use a wedge correctly I had a incident with a wedge coming out of a peace of gum and has caved in one side of my face and realistically lucky to be alive as it hit me on the blunt side and no the sharp. A lot of wood cutters/splitters will rave on about a wedge but without using proper technique
3:22 Punted the shit out that piece of wood lol
Came here to say the same thing.
I was expecting the spirit fingers 👐 after the step...hoist...pull🤔
What ur favorite axe rn?
Seems like this boils down to “Do it like a grandma”. Still great advice.
Axe head should not be pointing back toward you at point of impact. Should be coming straight down. Aka you have a far better chance of keeping your shins and feet for life.
The straight down stroke also gives a higher transfer of power from the tool head to the wood, exactly the same as banging fence posts.
6 ft, 200 lbs is small? Haha wasn't it little john in robinhood portrayed as a huge guy that in reality was like 6 foot/200? Can't remember who I'm thinking of but realistically, being about the same height and weight, we are considered tall/big when traveling to other parts of the world!
Railroad tie? Spike?
Yup! Misspoke. I actually just had to pickup some railroad ties today though. Horseshoe pit!
@@ThorenBradley thought you swung maul all day, or is it more of a fitness thing? What are the ties for?
I split a lot of green eucaliptus, weird, alien looking thing! Grows like cancer too, cut em down and back they come. Just good for pulp and firewood, crackles and pops a lot, really hot burning when dry, no embers, just snowy powdery ashes. Cheers from chile, mapuche country
Can u make hunting videos long videos
Hey Thor, we need to see a video eventually where you can just use your bare hands to rip a log in half ruclips.net/video/U0SqKxOo_44/видео.htmlsi=dJ27EOyi3JRugtxR
Guinness Draft? Extra stout is the only way to go. Splitting wood will not get you jacked if you wanna get jacked follow me and I'll explain it to you from A to Z.
I meant ON draft. Like nitro.
Nice video Thoren. Thanks for the beginner tips and it's always nice learning more about you. 💚🌳🪓
Well, I appreciate that!
its how to "split" wood not "chop."
🍺👑Bad Ass Channel
I like to use the X27 size axe with its ultra-light hollow handle for kindling. I don't own a hatchet, probably never will. Personally I think they encourage dangerous behavior:
ruclips.net/video/RpiHvPr2HnA/видео.html
#uck yah good vid bro I love chopping thank you
You are smart and beautiful.
Don’t trust the advice from someone who works in a brand new white shirt
buckin billy ray is great and has a youtube channel.
Biblical 🪓🙏
Thoren is the Dan Bilzerian that Dan Bilzerian should've been.
RUclips NEVER shows me any of your videos in my feed even tho I am subbed and have the bell set to show all.. Even a channel like yours, youtube still f*#%s you. so sad because they're doing it to a lot of people. I sadly almost forgot you make videos.
How to chop like a pro! Buy the guys' 200 dollar maul and spend an afternoon schwinging!! Fun
I'm not selling any mauls, bro!
@@ThorenBradley i guess he means buying the same 200 Dollar Axe you use
@ThorenBradley some people just have to try and cause problems to make themselves feel better. Don't sweat the haters man. You put out good content keep it up brother.
I've lived in the Sierra's for 10 years and I fell and split all my Firewood by hand. I can bust out a cord pretty quick. We should have a friendly competition. 😁
I can split wood in my sleep. I can actually split wood 🪵 with any splitting axe 🪓
If you work the sides first you can cut any thickness wood
Diddy me papa.
I'd like to have a splitting competition with you.