What you don't like food? I keep bees in Virginia. In this state just over 90 crops are dependent on honey bees for pollination. In the state of New Jersey the bees are so important that it is actually against the law to knowingly destroy a honey bee colony.
honey bees arent native to america and surprise surprise america was BLOOMING with life Honey bees are killing native pollinators and they wreck havoc on houses and entire towns at some points
Honey Bees are not killing native pollinators, they do not compete for the same living space and honey bees are primarily after nectar where native bees are primarily after pollen. And while yes native bees did the job prior to commercial agriculture, they just can't do the job of pollinating the quantity of crops that this nation requires now. And as far as damage, carpenter bees do hundreds of thousands of dollars more damage to the structure of wood buildings than honey bees do.
We had a length of tree that had a hive in it where we put our cut logs. Called a bee keeper and he hauled it away. Gave us some honey too. I call that a "Win-Win".
Well, I can see right quick, this ain't the first time you ever done this brother. Nice job. From a backyard beekeeper, thanks for working around the hive to save those bees.
We had a big hollow maple tree, the hive hole was 33' off the ground, chunking it down nailed plywood over the top and the hole and lowered teh chunk with the bees and nailed plywood over the bottom, right in the truck, 6' long and 3' diameter, parked it in an apple orchard and took plywood off bee hole. they lived in there like 3 years.
I love that you take your time and do it right. I worked for so many people that rushed every job and always seemed to be out of money. You seem like a stand up dude and a bad ass boss.
i actually purchased my first Stihl saw the other day because of you (brand new (MS261cm).. . thanks for all you insight on these incredible saws and any other equipment advice you give out.. your actually making me want to completely change careers.. from a machinist to a tree guy lol
Grats on the new saw! Machining is awesome too though. I subscribe to AVE and regularly watch a couple of others as they run their lathes/mills. I was a welder for years, and worked alongside some amazing machinists, always had a soft spot for it.
Jay Chris I am also a machinist and was considering changing careers, did you change and did it make you happier? I hate being indoors all the time. Regards!
I own a construction business and I happen to have more respect for animals than I do people.....needless to say thumbs up on this video it's always good to see guys have respect for nature. I'm the same way
Cool skill sets brother, good looking out for the bee's. Most folks don't realize that the bee population is dwindling, without the bees to pollinate plants were fucked.
Dude you're awesome. You make me want to climb up and try that. Professionals make it look easy, even though it's not. I'm just gonna keep like all the videos you have.
You truly have a way with the trees. you listen well. I have learnt a lot from your videos and now have the confidence to challenge those that don't listen. I have lots of diseased trees in my area, that are spread over 3 boroughs. I have called DEFRA, Natural England, The Forrest Commission and all 3 boroughs that are affected (Westminster. Camden and Islington). I have to log all concerns via their websites, more red tape. Help
I work for a tree service in Indiana. Seeing how much ground crew you guys have makes me jealous lol I did all of the ground crew work for a while (chipping, loading/moving wood, roping, etc.). Super envious of all these people that have 3-4 people to help rope those big limbs/logs down. It's a fun job although I feel it would be a lot more enjoyable with a full crew on the ground.
Ohhhh my god man THE NEW 362!!! Did that log ever land perfectly on that front wheel.... I was just waiting for pieces to go flying. Two years ago we were tugging a massive chunk off the top of a BIG old Sugar Maple - Partner had the new 441 with 30" Bar (Brand new that day!) Tied in at 10 - 12ft with the saw unclipped from the harness just in case the saw snatched out with the chunk tied to the truck. He gave me "Give'r Shit" wave and over came the log hauled the 441 right out of his hands and mangled it. Lol, the whole gas tank/rear handle assembly smashed and some other bits of the carb/throttle linkage - I had the technology though, I did rebuild her! Few hundred bucks later she was good to go! Great work man, I was working a side job last saturday solo. Pretty heavy labour, just flopping cutting and hauling - by about 1:00 I was catching myself thinking about taking shortcuts (wedging trees over that should be rigged to the maasdam). Was supposed to be a 1 day job, going on day 3 to finish it - not defeated - but when I catch myself taking those shortcuts or not taking the time to do things right... I do a stop re-think, obviously you learned that lesson and stated so haha. Live to work another day ;) just sharing my mileage in the subject. Cheers bud!
Thanks =) Sucks about the 441 though, nice to be able to fix stuff ourselves, saves a bunch. Speaking of 441, just heard today they're going to be coming out with a 441 C-M soon, so if your looking at a current 461, buy it, because I also heard they're going up $100 in about a week.
I know nothing about tree trimming, but I can tell this man knows what he is doing. To get all the limbs to fall in the same pile is impressive to me. Not sure how I ended up on this video, but I enjoyed it.
2:16 You know ur a pro when you've got a special pouch for ur gatorade :) but yea, hydration is very important. It's fun watching these vids, learning quite a few things from them.
I ran into ur vids because I watch a lot of milling vids. Watching them turn lumber into nice planks! When I started watching ur vid I thought it had with milling lumber! Lol! I watch the whole thing and nothing! Lol!! But when the vid was finished I thought I'd be upset and instead I found it entertaining! This was not the first vid that I initially saw. Cool job! Nice job saving the bees!! And what the heck is up with the stapling paper to the tree??! At first I thought it was a warning, stay away sign but I guess not because I removed the stump!
AWESOME SAUCE!!!!! Love your videos in-general (hu!)man, but this is great I actually have a property I manage and its owners are abroad right til maybe late-sept/early-oct, anyway one of the things I've gotta take care of is a lot of Oak limbing and one of (the largest) 'cluster' of Oaks there just so happens to have a ginormous beehive right around chest-height, I thought "maybe if I don't bother them, they won't bother me", but no they'll certainly bug(read: sting) you if you're setting-up a ladder or lines on that cluster of Oaks, I wasn't quite sure WTH to do because I know the owners would just tell me "spray them" (which I can't/won't do, even knowing they'd just get someone else to do it), need to find out how to actually get them to relocate (have >1k facebook 'friends' and made a very public plea for help, got nothing except sales-pitches from guys trying to sell bee services lol I guess if I were rich I'd pay for clearing bees from others' properties!) but, for now, this cloth-over-the-hive idea is brilliant I should be able to use that to just get-up and do the cutting needed w/o having to worry about them swarming me, wouldn't mind climbing near it if I knew it'd be limited stinging but my understanding is they can swarm and there's no way I'd be able to rely on setting up my figure-8 to descend if I were being attacked by bees!! Thanks as always man, great channel :)
I don't understand why people would want to cut down such a tree as that. Was it because of the bees? Would someone mind responding with an explanation?
Silver maple are very prone to splitting once they reach maturity in my area of the country, it’s a good possibility this one was within reach of a house and either made the home owner nervous or was recommended for removal by a tree company.
Why is it that we always seem to drop or break the new tools? When you got a old tool that you want to actually break or get destroyed, it seems to last forever.
dude you make the coolest vids keep up the good work and i love how you plan out each cut and how perfectly you execute each cut well done new sub here
Re that big section fell by plunge-cut@3:30: The idea of the plunge-cut being the felling-cut intrigues me as I can look-back and see plenty of times I would've done that had I seen this prior, however I'm immediately left worrying about teh possibility of MAJOR chain-pinch in a circumstance like that, I mean if you're doing the plunge cut as final-cut purposefully then it's OK for some pinching (well, not for the chain exactly, but in-terms-of it not getting stuck) because it's temporary as the top-half of the pinch is about to disappear as it falls, however if you were doing plunge-as-final (purposefully), I feel like there'd be such a chance of the top getting loose-enough that your bar is pinched but not loose-enough to fall-over its hinging yet....that'd be one helluva situation! I also wonder why, if you're doing plunge-as-felling cut, why you wouldn't have scored the back of the limb a lil, I don't mean to say I know it's unsafe or anything but wouldn't there be some 'insurance' in tearing that outermost inch or two just so it snaps cleaner once the plunge-cut has let the thing fall? Can't help but think/expect that, if you'd intentionally done that plunge as final-cut /felling-cut, that you must have a method/technique to it so that the bar's movement is away-from the building-pressures in-between top&bottom (to prevent the bar getting stuck/pinched), would love seeing an explanation video of that (and all your tips&tricks for felling / cutting / notching / etc, 'the way you actually touch the saw to the tree' ;D ) Going to go check your library maybe you've got one already and I've just missed it (oh that reminds me I was going to comment in your cs2511 video that you should post updates on it, that thing's the lightest unit on the market it'd be good to know someone like you had swung it around for 4mo, 10mo etc w/o breaking it (or even if it did break, that knowledge/data is still of value!!)
i am a tree worker as well if we find a tree with bees we call people to come for the bees and will not do anything to the tree until they are there to take the bees..if its wasps or hornets we spray a few times the boss will come back and check until there is little to no sign then we get it then..
it definitely was not red maple as I get a lot of that for firewood and it splits like butter. my favorite firewood is sassafras and it is easy to tell by the three different leaves and it smells like ginger when fresh cut or split
About 6 years ago when started doing tree pruning & removal work I was getting cocky with my new ms200t in a fairly tall sugar maple. Literally, the exact same thing in your video at the 6:24 mark expect my 200 was about 60 feet up and the log flipped on top of it and punched it into the ground. Needed a new chain brake & throttle assembly but after that, it's been running like a hoss. Have you ever tried the Husqvarna 550 or 562?
LOL, close to the same thing happened to me right after I got my 201T. Watch my (first big felling) video, got it falling about 40' from three angles, thankfully though the log didn't land on top.
Had something similar to that happen around 2008-2009 during a winter storm, that froze everything, and knocked down the big dead tree in the front yard. Well, soon we figured out that the entire tree was hollow, and chock full of bees. Long story short, we had to call in some people to deal with the bees.
Man... Wish you lots of luck. I don't know how long you have been doing this line of work but I see a lot of risk taken in your vids ? Hope all goes well for you guys ?....
Tree was down completely a little after 12:00, took awhile to send back the chip truck and pick up the skid steer though, finished up completely about 3.
I know that you’ve got a thousand things going through your head on a job, but could you mention the saw when you change from your tcm to something else. Looked like you used a MS 261 and a 362?
I'm no tree specialist, but I didn't understand the notch cut and then a plunge cut at 3:40, won't this pinch the bar? Why not a notch cut and then a back cut? Best,
Pretty sweet watching this stuff. Dont be afraid to get one of your boys on a long tag line. toss one around the base and have a dude help u control the swing so you dont even come close to smashing a window out.
Haven't really found plywood that stands up to something that size. Could rig it down, what I like to do on side jobs, at the 9-5 though, takes to long if it isn't required.
Because of the heavy lean, you plunge cut, leave as much hinge as you think you need, then cut the holding wood at the back, it prevents the limb from barberchairing.
Not sure what the owner was thinking. All you have to do is call a local beekeeper... any of them will trip over themselves to capture a free hive the day before you had to show up and cut. This sure is "the hard way"
I remember one time I was taking a 30 foot chunk of a fir tree. I made the same mistake as you and I cut into my face cut as I was doing the back cut. Unfortunately I had a lanyard on the saw and it jerked the crap out of me and it bent the bar.
I dropped a saw once, was not even a day old when I did it. Was a brand new 550xp and it landed on patio stones. Didn't break just a few scuffs on it. I know the feeling though.
I know that scream of SHIT!!!!!!! I've air mailed my saw 2x. my little 193 . if cry if I sent one of my big ones out.awesome saving the bees. We just run into yellow jackets and other flying assholes.
I have encountered this once and it scared the s*** out of me I was about 45-50 foot up when suddenly I was at a hornet's nest inside the rotted part of the tree trunk. I could not get my ass back on the ground fast enough
by experience ,, never clip big chain saw up there when cutting, only your ms-201,, it happen to me ,, the chain got stock in my back cut ,,you know the rest ,, p.s i was lucky,, and good job !
Absolutely, just got jambed up against the bucket, caused the cut to curve out. Paused it for a second after it happened, you can see my cut start straight, then get all janky. Still a dumbass mistake, but not the same one as making the top cut after the bottom. Made that mistake in my "first large felling" video in which I dropped my brand new 201TC about 40' >.
Hey buddy good job I watch a lot of your videos I've been doing tree work for about 17 years I seen the part in the bucket truck where your saw got ripped out of your hands and fell to the ground why don't you use a safety lanyard and clip it to your hornist that you were in the bucket truck it would've took up to 250 pounds of force to break the lanyard you can get those breakaways and your saw would've never fell to the ground with a log that small good job though buddy because that's a nice saw
Appreciate the comment. Simply put, I was being lazy. Had my regular climbing lanyard on my 200t, which was in the bucket as well at the time, and didn't want to stop the flow to have a groundie dig out my other one. Digging they went though right after it happened, learned my lesson there.
Been asked this a couple times, but I'm honestly not really comfortable giving training/lessons in anything. I'd check out ruclips.net/channel/UC7jakWKUvZqiH7q7dNJau6w and ruclips.net/user/arborpod They have great information.
Mike Billot most good companies repair damage like that with the tree service. But when logs are coming down from 20+ ft I'll take a lawn divot over a hole in the roof or a crushed car any day
Not sure if you had a 2nd sling it may have been easier to lift the truck in a basket configuration so it has less swing i rig with a jib crane a lot guys get mad cause it take a few extra minutes but they always no that good rigging takes time to do it Rt !
Was having a hard time finding a configuration that allowed enough lift, didn't really want to use my dyneema ultra sling, seemed easiest though. Watching the video, think I should have came at it from the other side. needed the hive entrance on top so I couldn't really just reposition the strap, else I would have. Learning experience, first time doing something like that.
Nice job taking the time to save a bee hive especially with how important bees are. Very professional.
bee are very unimportant at least for america
What you don't like food? I keep bees in Virginia. In this state just over 90 crops are dependent on honey bees for pollination. In the state of New Jersey the bees are so important that it is actually against the law to knowingly destroy a honey bee colony.
honey bees arent native to america and surprise surprise america was BLOOMING with life Honey bees are killing native pollinators and they wreck havoc on houses and entire towns at some points
Honey Bees are not killing native pollinators, they do not compete for the same living space and honey bees are primarily after nectar where native bees are primarily after pollen. And while yes native bees did the job prior to commercial agriculture, they just can't do the job of pollinating the quantity of crops that this nation requires now. And as far as damage, carpenter bees do hundreds of thousands of dollars more damage to the structure of wood buildings than honey bees do.
you know nothing
I respect that you guys took the time to do this a lot of company's are to lazy to deal with bees
Fffdgfcggs
We had a length of tree that had a hive in it where we put our cut logs. Called a bee keeper and he hauled it away. Gave us some honey too. I call that a "Win-Win".
Well, I can see right quick, this ain't the first time you ever done this brother. Nice job. From a backyard beekeeper, thanks for working around the hive to save those bees.
Good videos. More rigging and gear and knot tying is always appreciated. Love the shop videos also!
We had a big hollow maple tree, the hive hole was 33' off the ground, chunking it down nailed plywood over the top and the hole and lowered teh chunk with the bees and nailed plywood over the bottom, right in the truck, 6' long and 3' diameter, parked it in an apple orchard and took plywood off bee hole. they lived in there like 3 years.
Nice!
I love that you take your time and do it right. I worked for so many people that rushed every job and always seemed to be out of money. You seem like a stand up dude and a bad ass boss.
As a Bee keeper myself, brilliant job. Well done
i actually purchased my first Stihl saw the other day because of you (brand new (MS261cm).. . thanks for all you insight on these incredible saws and any other equipment advice you give out.. your actually making me want to completely change careers.. from a machinist to a tree guy lol
Grats on the new saw! Machining is awesome too though. I subscribe to AVE and regularly watch a couple of others as they run their lathes/mills. I was a welder for years, and worked alongside some amazing machinists, always had a soft spot for it.
Jay Chris I am also a machinist and was considering changing careers, did you change and did it make you happier? I hate being indoors all the time. Regards!
Hello fellow human....... Love watching your videos keep up that good tree cutting
I own a construction business and I happen to have more respect for animals than I do people.....needless to say thumbs up on this video it's always good to see guys have respect for nature. I'm the same way
Cool skill sets brother, good looking out for the bee's. Most folks don't realize that the bee population is dwindling, without the bees to pollinate plants were fucked.
Dude you're awesome. You make me want to climb up and try that. Professionals make it look easy, even though it's not. I'm just gonna keep like all the videos you have.
I love how you always show your mistakes, it shows you are still human
You truly have a way with the trees. you listen well. I have learnt a lot from your videos and now have the confidence to challenge those that don't listen. I have lots of diseased trees in my area, that are spread over 3 boroughs. I have called DEFRA, Natural England, The Forrest Commission and all 3 boroughs that are affected (Westminster. Camden and Islington). I have to log all concerns via their websites, more red tape. Help
I work for a tree service in Indiana. Seeing how much ground crew you guys have makes me jealous lol I did all of the ground crew work for a while (chipping, loading/moving wood, roping, etc.). Super envious of all these people that have 3-4 people to help rope those big limbs/logs down. It's a fun job although I feel it would be a lot more enjoyable with a full crew on the ground.
Sucks when your saw takes a fall. Happened to me more times than i'll ever admit. :-)
my husqvarna 560xp has been caught by a tree it crushed my saw in half
Luckily he had a stihl. Positive anything else would’ve been fucked.
Ohhhh my god man THE NEW 362!!! Did that log ever land perfectly on that front wheel.... I was just waiting for pieces to go flying. Two years ago we were tugging a massive chunk off the top of a BIG old Sugar Maple - Partner had the new 441 with 30" Bar (Brand new that day!) Tied in at 10 - 12ft with the saw unclipped from the harness just in case the saw snatched out with the chunk tied to the truck. He gave me "Give'r Shit" wave and over came the log hauled the 441 right out of his hands and mangled it. Lol, the whole gas tank/rear handle assembly smashed and some other bits of the carb/throttle linkage - I had the technology though, I did rebuild her! Few hundred bucks later she was good to go!
Great work man, I was working a side job last saturday solo. Pretty heavy labour, just flopping cutting and hauling - by about 1:00 I was catching myself thinking about taking shortcuts (wedging trees over that should be rigged to the maasdam). Was supposed to be a 1 day job, going on day 3 to finish it - not defeated - but when I catch myself taking those shortcuts or not taking the time to do things right... I do a stop re-think, obviously you learned that lesson and stated so haha. Live to work another day ;) just sharing my mileage in the subject.
Cheers bud!
Thanks =) Sucks about the 441 though, nice to be able to fix stuff ourselves, saves a bunch. Speaking of 441, just heard today they're going to be coming out with a 441 C-M soon, so if your looking at a current 461, buy it, because I also heard they're going up $100 in about a week.
thats why you use saw straps
Nice job, I've kept bees in the past and have many friends that still do.
pink helmet is manliest helmet
Is a dress the manliest bit of clothing too?
Damn straight. It sure is.
Takes a real man to go out in pink, if you're straight
Rec kfn Foxx
Fc99:dogs
I didn't even know people posted videos of cutting up big trees this morning, and now I've watched like 6 of them! awesome stuff!
Top Banana Mr H, good saw work and a colony of out little friends saved 🐝
I know nothing about tree trimming, but I can tell this man knows what he is doing. To get all the limbs to fall in the same pile is impressive to me. Not sure how I ended up on this video, but I enjoyed it.
2:16 You know ur a pro when you've got a special pouch for ur gatorade :) but yea, hydration is very important. It's fun watching these vids, learning quite a few things from them.
those bees are going to be pissed! Good job helping relocate them to a new home.
Utmost in professionalism and respect.... a testament to your company and your Crew...
always nice to see quality workmanship still exist!!
nice job as always
bk
I ran into ur vids because I watch a lot of milling vids. Watching them turn lumber into nice planks! When I started watching ur vid I thought it had with milling lumber! Lol! I watch the whole thing and nothing! Lol!! But when the vid was finished I thought I'd be upset and instead I found it entertaining! This was not the first vid that I initially saw. Cool job! Nice job saving the bees!! And what the heck is up with the stapling paper to the tree??! At first I thought it was a warning, stay away sign but I guess not because I removed the stump!
Too keep the bees in
hey that's great we need bees
AWESOME SAUCE!!!!! Love your videos in-general (hu!)man, but this is great I actually have a property I manage and its owners are abroad right til maybe late-sept/early-oct, anyway one of the things I've gotta take care of is a lot of Oak limbing and one of (the largest) 'cluster' of Oaks there just so happens to have a ginormous beehive right around chest-height, I thought "maybe if I don't bother them, they won't bother me", but no they'll certainly bug(read: sting) you if you're setting-up a ladder or lines on that cluster of Oaks, I wasn't quite sure WTH to do because I know the owners would just tell me "spray them" (which I can't/won't do, even knowing they'd just get someone else to do it), need to find out how to actually get them to relocate (have >1k facebook 'friends' and made a very public plea for help, got nothing except sales-pitches from guys trying to sell bee services lol I guess if I were rich I'd pay for clearing bees from others' properties!) but, for now, this cloth-over-the-hive idea is brilliant I should be able to use that to just get-up and do the cutting needed w/o having to worry about them swarming me, wouldn't mind climbing near it if I knew it'd be limited stinging but my understanding is they can swarm and there's no way I'd be able to rely on setting up my figure-8 to descend if I were being attacked by bees!!
Thanks as always man, great channel :)
There’s a thing called snap cuts?
When I watch these all I think is man I could make some nice boards out of those trees
I don't understand why people would want to cut down such a tree as that. Was it because of the bees? Would someone mind responding with an explanation?
Silver maple are very prone to splitting once they reach maturity in my area of the country, it’s a good possibility this one was within reach of a house and either made the home owner nervous or was recommended for removal by a tree company.
That was freakin' cool. Glad you didn't bust up the 362 lol.
Those are some very well-behaved bees. Really well done, guys.
You deserve way more subs. These videos are quality recorded
Why is it that we always seem to drop or break the new tools? When you got a old tool that you want to actually break or get destroyed, it seems to last forever.
dude you make the coolest vids keep up the good work and i love how you plan out each cut and how perfectly you execute each cut well done new sub here
Re that big section fell by plunge-cut@3:30:
The idea of the plunge-cut being the felling-cut intrigues me as I can look-back and see plenty of times I would've done that had I seen this prior, however I'm immediately left worrying about teh possibility of MAJOR chain-pinch in a circumstance like that, I mean if you're doing the plunge cut as final-cut purposefully then it's OK for some pinching (well, not for the chain exactly, but in-terms-of it not getting stuck) because it's temporary as the top-half of the pinch is about to disappear as it falls, however if you were doing plunge-as-final (purposefully), I feel like there'd be such a chance of the top getting loose-enough that your bar is pinched but not loose-enough to fall-over its hinging yet....that'd be one helluva situation! I also wonder why, if you're doing plunge-as-felling cut, why you wouldn't have scored the back of the limb a lil, I don't mean to say I know it's unsafe or anything but wouldn't there be some 'insurance' in tearing that outermost inch or two just so it snaps cleaner once the plunge-cut has let the thing fall?
Can't help but think/expect that, if you'd intentionally done that plunge as final-cut /felling-cut, that you must have a method/technique to it so that the bar's movement is away-from the building-pressures in-between top&bottom (to prevent the bar getting stuck/pinched), would love seeing an explanation video of that (and all your tips&tricks for felling / cutting / notching / etc, 'the way you actually touch the saw to the tree' ;D ) Going to go check your library maybe you've got one already and I've just missed it (oh that reminds me I was going to comment in your cs2511 video that you should post updates on it, that thing's the lightest unit on the market it'd be good to know someone like you had swung it around for 4mo, 10mo etc w/o breaking it (or even if it did break, that knowledge/data is still of value!!)
i am a tree worker as well if we find a tree with bees we call people to come for the bees and will not do anything to the tree until they are there to take the bees..if its wasps or hornets we spray a few times the boss will come back and check until there is little to no sign then we get it then..
nice what kind of tree was that nice clean wood
Maple, didn't look to see what specific species.
it definitely was not red maple as I get a lot of that for firewood and it splits like butter. my favorite firewood is sassafras and it is easy to tell by the three different leaves and it smells like ginger when fresh cut or split
Silver Maple, I think
Silver
About 6 years ago when started doing tree pruning & removal work I was getting cocky with my new ms200t in a fairly tall sugar maple. Literally, the exact same thing in your video at the 6:24 mark expect my 200 was about 60 feet up and the log flipped on top of it and punched it into the ground. Needed a new chain brake & throttle assembly but after that, it's been running like a hoss. Have you ever tried the Husqvarna 550 or 562?
LOL, close to the same thing happened to me right after I got my 201T. Watch my (first big felling) video, got it falling about 40' from three angles, thankfully though the log didn't land on top.
Had something similar to that happen around 2008-2009 during a winter storm, that froze everything, and knocked down the big dead tree in the front yard. Well, soon we figured out that the entire tree was hollow, and chock full of bees. Long story short, we had to call in some people to deal with the bees.
Man... Wish you lots of luck. I don't know how long you have been doing this line of work but I see a lot of risk taken in your vids ? Hope all goes well for you guys ?....
When I see your saw get stuck in the cut I was like NOOOOO then you lucky son of clover !
I know! Tree gods smiled on me, lol
Human they sure did !
Human we work on bee trees like every two months yes for like The last eight years that's six times a year LOL will get stung hahahaha
How long did this job take from start to finish?
Tree was down completely a little after 12:00, took awhile to send back the chip truck and pick up the skid steer though, finished up completely about 3.
I know that you’ve got a thousand things going through your head on a job, but could you mention the saw when you change from your tcm to something else. Looked like you used a MS 261 and a 362?
Didn't have the 261 on this job, correct on the 362 though
Nice job mate
Just wounderimg if your ground man where wearing jeans?
Yep
Human ... is it law not to wear trousers? Just thinking for the safety of your gang
Our industry in the states is horribly unregulated.
Human haha got any jobs going 😂😂 I sweat like fuck in trousers
I'm no tree specialist, but I didn't understand the notch cut and then a plunge cut at 3:40, won't this pinch the bar? Why not a notch cut and then a back cut? Best,
Again and again I only see beginners on the tree business uploading videos, just like this guys on this video.
Pretty sweet watching this stuff. Dont be afraid to get one of your boys on a long tag line. toss one around the base and have a dude help u control the swing so you dont even come close to smashing a window out.
Instead of digging pits in the yard, did you consider some thick plywood?
Haven't really found plywood that stands up to something that size. Could rig it down, what I like to do on side jobs, at the 9-5 though, takes to long if it isn't required.
Why the plunge cut at 330?
Because of the heavy lean, you plunge cut, leave as much hinge as you think you need, then cut the holding wood at the back, it prevents the limb from barberchairing.
@@raphaelbeinhauer9242 Many thanks.
Not sure what the owner was thinking. All you have to do is call a local beekeeper... any of them will trip over themselves to capture a free hive the day before you had to show up and cut. This sure is "the hard way"
is the black saw a 261?
I had a feeling that stump was going to hit the window of the skid. Good thing it didn't break.
Damn that was a nice tree though. What was there reason for wanting it cut down?
I remember one time I was taking a 30 foot chunk of a fir tree. I made the same mistake as you and I cut into my face cut as I was doing the back cut. Unfortunately I had a lanyard on the saw and it jerked the crap out of me and it bent the bar.
You should fit a grapple to the skid steer so it ends pulling branches by hand
Also, do would you do the same for bald faced hornets? haha
Good shit as always. Won't let you go this time for dropping the stihl lol.
Bad technique is the only issue
So if someone forgets their helmet they get the pink extra huh? That's a great idea and I'm sure motivates people to not forget their personal PPE.
2:05 one big NOPE, buddy
Pussy
I used to be a ground guy for 4 yrs. It was cool. But I don't miss it
I know of butterflies in the stomach and wishbone removal, but I never knew bee in the tree was part of Operation!
New variation, lol
I dropped a saw once, was not even a day old when I did it. Was a brand new 550xp and it landed on patio stones. Didn't break just a few scuffs on it.
I know the feeling though.
what a cool video.
Save the Bees indeeed!
Is green Gatorade your favorite flavor cause it’s mine
You're doing it wrong! BLUE Gatorade man...blue.
Awesome videos man!!!
The chainsaw just got some battle damage
Stihl, takes a kickin' and keeps on tickin'.
Woulda been funny if he took it over to Cody's Lab.
How much to cut trees now
You answered my thought, have you ever dropped the saw out of the tree.
I know that scream of SHIT!!!!!!! I've air mailed my saw 2x. my little 193 . if cry if I sent one of my big ones out.awesome saving the bees. We just run into yellow jackets and other flying assholes.
I have encountered this once and it scared the s*** out of me I was about 45-50 foot up when suddenly I was at a hornet's nest inside the rotted part of the tree trunk. I could not get my ass back on the ground fast enough
Awesome video brother
Who's nice yard was he throwing that wood in to?
Wait is this work Called Arborists?
10:53 was that a fart?!🤔
I would have gotten those rubber mat to put in the yard to protect that nice yard
At 4:00 it looks like you really sharpened the chain well
Why am i watching this at 4 in the morning?
Why did you drop the saw
11:40 I don’t think she knows that trees grow in layers lmao
That there's some precision work!
SAVE THE BEES! Alt. National Park Service... Alt. NASA
Impressive. Youre a beast.
by experience ,, never clip big chain saw up there when cutting, only your ms-201,, it happen to me ,, the chain got stock in my back cut ,,you know the rest ,, p.s i was lucky,, and good job !
always do your top cut inbound or gob on a peice like that. never outbound duude
Absolutely, just got jambed up against the bucket, caused the cut to curve out. Paused it for a second after it happened, you can see my cut start straight, then get all janky. Still a dumbass mistake, but not the same one as making the top cut after the bottom. Made that mistake in my "first large felling" video in which I dropped my brand new 201TC about 40' >.
0:25 he needs to be tought how to pack a tin
Hey buddy good job I watch a lot of your videos I've been doing tree work for about 17 years I seen the part in the bucket truck where your saw got ripped out of your hands and fell to the ground why don't you use a safety lanyard and clip it to your hornist that you were in the bucket truck it would've took up to 250 pounds of force to break the lanyard you can get those breakaways and your saw would've never fell to the ground with a log that small good job though buddy because that's a nice saw
Appreciate the comment. Simply put, I was being lazy. Had my regular climbing lanyard on my 200t, which was in the bucket as well at the time, and didn't want to stop the flow to have a groundie dig out my other one. Digging they went though right after it happened, learned my lesson there.
I live your videos your should show us the knots u use
Been asked this a couple times, but I'm honestly not really comfortable giving training/lessons in anything. I'd check out
ruclips.net/channel/UC7jakWKUvZqiH7q7dNJau6w
and
ruclips.net/user/arborpod
They have great information.
Human ok thank u I've always liked knots my dad was raft guide and teaches me couple
make a video on felling a tree if you don't have one already.
come on let it hit the w/s , PS I do windows, thanks glassman. GJ
WTF is up at 3:10 ? What purpose does it serve to stab cut and work back from the bed you cut? You musta been bored and playing.
not at all, look up bore cutting
Human. Bored cutting? Joking with you. Ill have to look it up.
id be pissed making all those divots in my lawn for the neighbors tree.
Mike Billot most good companies repair damage like that with the tree service.
But when logs are coming down from 20+ ft I'll take a lawn divot over a hole in the roof or a crushed car any day
Mike Billot what are divots?
TheSinistOfKarma small gouges or holes in the ground
Tyranzor Katastrophe okay thanks for the help!
Widgets
Nice plunge cut at 3:38
Not sure if you had a 2nd sling it may have been easier to lift the truck in a basket configuration so it has less swing i rig with a jib crane a lot guys get mad cause it take a few extra minutes but they always no that good rigging takes time to do it Rt !
Was having a hard time finding a configuration that allowed enough lift, didn't really want to use my dyneema ultra sling, seemed easiest though. Watching the video, think I should have came at it from the other side. needed the hive entrance on top so I couldn't really just reposition the strap, else I would have. Learning experience, first time doing something like that.
Human it work n no damage love your videos