@@farwindowusa Depends if it was a couple ricks or 1 cord or 100 cords. 1 cord takes about a hour by hand depending on how narly the wood is. When in my 60s using a splitter about 30 minutes. I'm 69 now and stopped logging when i was 65 but still spilt and cut my own wood by hand. The work out is good for old farts like me. My family has been doing logging for over 100 years. It's in my blood...{q}
@@farwindowusa I started in the family business when i was 10 years old. We had contracts with Pot Latch with was the paper mill in Cloquet Minnesota. I did that till I was 21 years old. Then I went to a training camp for fire fighting witch took me all over the world. At 65 years i had both my knees replaced because of all the decades of kneeling on the bark. It took my knees out .If I had to do it again i would not change a thing. It was the best times of my life. I walk two miles everyday now and still get out there and get my wood for winter. My friends who are still alive tell me I still look like a brick shit house. Someday they will find my dead in the woods having done what I love to do best. Logging...{q}
Extreme Dangerous Fastest Big Chainsaw Cutting Tree Machines | Monster Stump Removal Excavator #66
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man, i love the smell of fresh-cut wood. takes me back to my childhood
Those guys are like surgeons with those chainsaws! Super precise.
Exactly!
Holy smokes! That feller buncher is insane! Never seen a machine like that before.
1👍I love the log and loader 19:02
This is way cooler than I thought it would be. Great video!
This brings back some memories! My grandpa used to work in a lumber mill
This makes me appreciate where all my wood furniture comes from.
Thanks for posting this! I'm learning a ton about logging.
Thats some serious horsepower! Those engines must be powerful
Im impressed by how careful they are with the trees
I wonder how much one of those harvesters costs. Probably a small fortune!
This makes me want to go camping in the woods this weekend.
That skidder is pulling some serious weight. Those tires must be huge!
I could watch this stuff for hours
I bet that sawmill is loud in person! But it's cool to see how it works.
I remember going to a sawmill with my dad when I was a kid
Whoa, check out the size of that grapple! It's like a giant claw.
Its good to see theyre replanting after they harvest
I love those log splitters. To think back in the day we did all that by hand. Awesome...{q}
I'm so happy to have you as a viewer!
How long did it typically take to split a large amount of wood by hand compared to using a log splitter?
@@farwindowusa Depends if it was a couple ricks or 1 cord or 100 cords. 1 cord takes about a hour by hand depending on how narly the wood is. When in my 60s using a splitter about 30 minutes. I'm 69 now and stopped logging when i was 65 but still spilt and cut my own wood by hand. The work out is good for old farts like me. My family has been doing logging for over 100 years. It's in my blood...{q}
@@keeperofsecretsq-z1b Wow, that's great, with such heavy logging at this age do you see any health problems?
@@farwindowusa I started in the family business when i was 10 years old. We had contracts with Pot Latch with was the paper mill in Cloquet Minnesota. I did that till I was 21 years old. Then I went to a training camp for fire fighting witch took me all over the world. At 65 years i had both my knees replaced because of all the decades of kneeling on the bark. It took my knees out .If I had to do it again i would not change a thing. It was the best times of my life. I walk two miles everyday now and still get out there and get my wood for winter. My friends who are still alive tell me I still look like a brick shit house. Someday they will find my dead in the woods having done what I love to do best. Logging...{q}
Those log loaders are like something out of a monster truck rally!
Id love to see a video about how they make paper from trees
I bet it takes a lot of skill to operate those machines
That forwarder is non-stop! Its like a little ant carrying a huge load.
Ive always been curious about how they get those logs out of the forest.