I'd like to see a time laps video of a tree like this being taken down from top to bottom with the camera in 1 spot. I know nothing about tree work other than what I've learned from your videos but for some reason this fascinates me. Love your content bro, keep it up.
That oak wasn't large, that oak was ducking HUGE!!! Love your videos human, hope I can be an arborist when I'm done with my "forestry and wildlandmaintainance" study. I'd do everything to do that for the rest of my life. Keep your great videos going👍
I really enjoy watching your crew removing large tree SAFELY. I have removed trees from my property And yes I have learned a lot of what NOT to do. But they weren't nearly the size as the trees you take down. I want to remove some large branches from a few trees but I can't do it safely so they are still there. I'll hire a pro for them. Keep up the good work. Be safe brother. Your the best.
Great video! I noticed the snow on the ground, not sure of the actual temp. Do you ever set your saws to the winter carb shutter position? Also, what's your opinion of that Silky pole saw?
I set all of our saws to winter shutter mode about 1 1/2 months ago. I've climbed in as low as 9 degrees, and had no issues with the saw, though my hands were another story. I did a video on this longboy, you can watch it for my feelings, but my next one I think I'm going back to the zubat, love silky, just not this model so much.
fricken awsome video man! keep them coming. definitely would like to see one time in the future a full on video on how you tie off a brach to catch it and lower it after you cut it, but definitely keep up the good videos. hey what lift was being used? not your bucket truck but the other one with tracks on this thing looked sick as HELL
Some really good videos on rigging are done by TheClimbingArborist, can be found here www.climbingarborist.com/rigging.php . That lift is a JLG, unsure of model or anything, but it's narrow and on tracks so it can go where the bucket truck can't. Also has 75' lift, opposed to our trucks 60', is pretty nice when you need it, but it's way slow.
Thanks man! I will definitely check them out for sure, the more you know and the more you learn makes your job and life easier! And i could totally see the lift being useful in may ways with my company, like when im doing a house power washing i could go all the way around the house without any ladders and also when im painting or installing outside lights, so id definitely like to look into that.
It is huge, not ours though, we just rent it occasionally, I believe it's the model in the link below. www.jlg.com/en/equipment/electric-hybrid-boom-lifts/compact-crawlers/x600aj
pushing the weight cap. with the rounds? also, this, and other vids, I was always taught (I'm old, 60yr.) that your supposed to keep your lines close with a clove hitch with heavy stuff, yours are spaced? thanks- great vid/editing.
Not too much, 13,000 lb MBS on those ropes, so 2,500 or so SWL with a 5:1 safety factor. Occasionally I do use the close hitch, a much bigger fan of the running bowline though. In the video, it's not cloves I'm using, it's a running bowline with an additional half hitch on the butt side, takes some of the strain off of the knot on the bowline.
great info- it's been awhile. we always used the bowline as well but without a safety hitch, different ropes/techniques. that's why I'm into your site, to learn all the new stuff, and it's eye opening. thank you.
It was a rental, and our other climber used it to get at some of the stuff over the house that the bucket truck couldn't reach. Where he's at in the yard, the bucket truck couldn't get to.
Watched a few of your videos so far. Very few on youtube worth watching but yours are. I thought you were the business owner with your skill set. Heck I was even impressed with your ground guys. I can't even hire someone I can trust to run a chainsaw on the ground much less a climber. Some can't even crank a saw no matter how much or how well you teach them. Though I did hire a saddle climber years ago but it took him two days to do what I could do in one. Oh yes Hypoxylon canker, I didn't even notice it until I read the post.
Thanks much, maybe someday, but not for a few years I imagine. Sadly, we're lacking on ground guys right now, one fell off a roof and broke both feet, and another left for another company. As the junior climber I'm kinda stuck on the ground for the time being =( Totally agree with you though, good help is incredibly hard to find
Human my friend. Happy New year and Big trees wish i you. Climbers are the best Ground man, They know what to do. Good work, as always , Greets, Basti from Germany ;-)
Good day! Hope you've some decent weather for work, I know it can get rather chilly in your area. 100% correct on climbers on the ground, whenever I'm on the ground for Joe, or he's on the ground for me, the job goes much faster. I have a feeling it'll be the same with Robbie, he knows his stuff. I wish you and yours the very best in this new year =)
I’m watching this and seeing loads of good firewood and kindling. If it were my tree, I’d just ask the crew to organize the piles, then I’d cut and split it into firewood.
Nice video! Cool tree to remove. Im not sure but at 5:55 it looks like you left hand is kind of close to the chain when rolling the log and you have your finger on the accelerator so its a risk. Stay safe man :)
Yeah, closer than I think is safe, nice catch. I generally try to pull my bar down away from the off hand as soon as I'm through the wood, need to do a better job of it. I know you're always supposed to have two hands on the saw, just takes way to damn long sometimes though. Thanks for the comment =)
Yeah just a warning and something to think about! Two hands on the saw when its possible but sometimes it is necessary and good to just use one hand as long as we do it careful
Thanks, and that's a 16" on there. Though I am looking at something smaller though, not a young man and my shoulder is starting to bother me. Looking at the MS 150, or the new Husqvarna battery powered climbing saw, either way would be much lighter than my 201t.
The yellow is a 9/16" all gear husky, 14,000 lb average break strength. www.allgearinc.com/arborist-rigging/husky-bull.html www.treestuff.com/store/catalog.asp?category_id=3&item=1006#detail
Thanks for the response man. That oak wilt is a death sentence for red oaks and this appears to be a pin oak which is a member of the red oak family. Just curious, trees can speak a lot of things to us more so than the clients, I'm always wondering why they react to things the way they do. If that's true any red oak in that vicinity is at risk to contract the fungus as long as any wood for that tree is still in the area, even from the stump and the root system for a considerable amount of distance. Job security baby!
You’re right, it was a beautiful tree but sometimes the proximity to someone’s home or something like that is just too close or the tree is starting to rot and drop limbs. Would you want this thing coming through the roof of your house in a really bad storm or tornado 🌪? Just some things to think about. It’s not like these guys are taking down whole swaths of old growth.
hey human do you have any extra climbing gear you would sell for cheap always wanted to get into climbing I'm a logger who has 3 kids and a wife just don't have the money to buy new stuff right now
+Human hum.... would it be worth it to drive down from northern Minnesota...... do most tree services allow an every day guy, with a pickup truck and chainsaw, to take wood from a sight? I have never asked?
I have people come up to me fairly regularly and ask for the wood, and have yet to turn anyone down. If we're short at the shop I'm sure I'd have to say no, hasn't happened yet though. Can't hurt to ask if you've got a crew working nearby!
Just found your channel today and it’s awesome brother! Im a veteran myself (I was actually in the Air Force and medically retired after 12years, unlike your Pararescue college roommate 😂.. funny story though). I was wondering how you went from the Navy to felling trees? I stuck pretty close to what I did when I was in: I went from working on old school equipment to pharmaceutical equipment. Huge difference working for someone that has money, doing more with less during the Obama years burnt a lot of people out and the smart ones got out, they were where I was stationed anyway. How do you deal with all these people correcting you and telling you how to do your job? It would drive nuts! Stay safe brother! I want to cut down all my pine trees that are dead 2/3rds of the way up now after watching your channel! Lol
lol, understatement there. Rented a crane for it, but didn't have a spot to get close enough to lift the sections out. Just bucked it on the ground then lifted'em out with the crane. Some real craters, filled them back in nicely though, brought a whole bunch of dirt in along with what we brought to fill in the stump cavity.
7:32 freefall, and 7:40 roped . Not very comfy with the size of wood you are dropping, while directly above your hoist truck. Sure its roped down, but if that rope were to fail in any way, it would sure put one heck of a divot in your truck!
Being from out West I find that statement funny, pines and redwoods tend to get struck here since our oaks are so short comparatively. Although in other parts of the country I can understand why oaks get hit a lot since they are usually the tallest trees in the area.
That and many oak trees suffer from heart rot. Note the brown core of the tree and the many hollow spots. This is a dangerous tree that needed to be cut down.
Truly a pleasure to watch a professional at work. You make it look easy when we really know it is extremely dangerous. Cheers and best regards.
I'd like to see a time laps video of a tree like this being taken down from top to bottom with the camera in 1 spot. I know nothing about tree work other than what I've learned from your videos but for some reason this fascinates me. Love your content bro, keep it up.
I just subbed hope you can return the favor
Do u guys own the JLG lift? How many truck booms vs mobile booms?
I dont know why but watching these vids are sooo relaxing
For me its kinda relaxing and kinda nerve-wracking
RJM@54 7/26/2018
what is the tallest tree you
have ever worked in and how
high up were you in it
What's the rigging line going through that block to the bucket?
Nice job, greets from a climber from Holland
That oak wasn't large, that oak was ducking HUGE!!!
Love your videos human, hope I can be an arborist when I'm done with my "forestry and wildlandmaintainance" study. I'd do everything to do that for the rest of my life.
Keep your great videos going👍
Hey, show the different tree grinders, what do the branches look like as they grind into the truck?
I really enjoy watching your crew removing large tree SAFELY. I have removed trees from my property And yes I have learned a lot of what NOT to do. But they weren't nearly the size as the trees you take down. I want to remove some large branches from a few trees but I can't do it safely so they are still there. I'll hire a pro for them. Keep up the good work. Be safe brother. Your the best.
Great video! I noticed the snow on the ground, not sure of the actual temp. Do you ever set your saws to the winter carb shutter position? Also, what's your opinion of that Silky pole saw?
I set all of our saws to winter shutter mode about 1 1/2 months ago. I've climbed in as low as 9 degrees, and had no issues with the saw, though my hands were another story. I did a video on this longboy, you can watch it for my feelings, but my next one I think I'm going back to the zubat, love silky, just not this model so much.
fricken awsome video man! keep them coming. definitely would like to see one time in the future a full on video on how you tie off a brach to catch it and lower it after you cut it, but definitely keep up the good videos. hey what lift was being used? not your bucket truck but the other one with tracks on this thing looked sick as HELL
Some really good videos on rigging are done by TheClimbingArborist, can be found here www.climbingarborist.com/rigging.php . That lift is a JLG, unsure of model or anything, but it's narrow and on tracks so it can go where the bucket truck can't. Also has 75' lift, opposed to our trucks 60', is pretty nice when you need it, but it's way slow.
Thanks man! I will definitely check them out for sure, the more you know and the more you learn makes your job and life easier! And i could totally see the lift being useful in may ways with my company, like when im doing a house power washing i could go all the way around the house without any ladders and also when im painting or installing outside lights, so id definitely like to look into that.
What Stihl was that the first minutes
Was that a 191 or 192 you were trimming the top of the tree with
Truck = how high is the reach?
Hello, why did you have line from the tree to the bucket
I love your videos! What is that other lift in the back ground? It's hard to find towable lifts over 55' that one look huge in this video.
It is huge, not ours though, we just rent it occasionally, I believe it's the model in the link below.
www.jlg.com/en/equipment/electric-hybrid-boom-lifts/compact-crawlers/x600aj
Human Thank you Sir, Get better soon!
pushing the weight cap. with the rounds? also, this, and other vids, I was always taught (I'm old, 60yr.) that your supposed to keep your lines close with a clove hitch with heavy stuff, yours are spaced? thanks- great vid/editing.
Not too much, 13,000 lb MBS on those ropes, so 2,500 or so SWL with a 5:1 safety factor. Occasionally I do use the close hitch, a much bigger fan of the running bowline though. In the video, it's not cloves I'm using, it's a running bowline with an additional half hitch on the butt side, takes some of the strain off of the knot on the bowline.
great info- it's been awhile. we always used the bowline as well but without a safety hitch, different ropes/techniques. that's why I'm into your site, to learn all the new stuff, and it's eye opening. thank you.
10:35 is that your own lift down there or rental? Also what was it used for?
It was a rental, and our other climber used it to get at some of the stuff over the house that the bucket truck couldn't reach. Where he's at in the yard, the bucket truck couldn't get to.
Watched a few of your videos so far. Very few on youtube worth watching but yours are. I thought you were the business owner with your skill set. Heck I was even impressed with your ground guys. I can't even hire someone I can trust to run a chainsaw on the ground much less a climber. Some can't even crank a saw no matter how much or how well you teach them. Though I did hire a saddle climber years ago but it took him two days to do what I could do in one. Oh yes Hypoxylon canker, I didn't even notice it until I read the post.
Thanks much, maybe someday, but not for a few years I imagine. Sadly, we're lacking on ground guys right now, one fell off a roof and broke both feet, and another left for another company. As the junior climber I'm kinda stuck on the ground for the time being =( Totally agree with you though, good help is incredibly hard to find
Awesome vid bro, does it smell amazing when cutting Oak?
Human my friend. Happy New year and Big trees wish i you. Climbers are the best Ground man, They know what to do.
Good work, as always , Greets, Basti from Germany ;-)
Good day! Hope you've some decent weather for work, I know it can get rather chilly in your area. 100% correct on climbers on the ground, whenever I'm on the ground for Joe, or he's on the ground for me, the job goes much faster. I have a feeling it'll be the same with Robbie, he knows his stuff.
I wish you and yours the very best in this new year =)
I’m watching this and seeing loads of good firewood and kindling. If it were my tree, I’d just ask the crew to organize the piles, then I’d cut and split it into firewood.
Nice video! Cool tree to remove.
Im not sure but at 5:55 it looks like you left hand is kind of close to the chain when rolling the log and you have your finger on the accelerator so its a risk. Stay safe man :)
Yeah, closer than I think is safe, nice catch. I generally try to pull my bar down away from the off hand as soon as I'm through the wood, need to do a better job of it. I know you're always supposed to have two hands on the saw, just takes way to damn long sometimes though. Thanks for the comment =)
Yeah just a warning and something to think about! Two hands on the saw when its possible but sometimes it is necessary and good to just use one hand as long as we do it careful
two hands is impossible, unless you like being in a tree for a week. still the first thing I insist on with my "geenies" until I see confident work.
what size bar do you use on your climbing saw? and job well done
Thanks, and that's a 16" on there. Though I am looking at something smaller though, not a young man and my shoulder is starting to bother me. Looking at the MS 150, or the new Husqvarna battery powered climbing saw, either way would be much lighter than my 201t.
ok thank you
Could you not use pallets to save some lawn patching?
Yep, but I'm not the boss
Was that a 192t?
That's my 201t again, we only have one 192t, and I don't really use it.
What size rope and strength are you using for your rigging?
The yellow is a 9/16" all gear husky, 14,000 lb average break strength.
www.allgearinc.com/arborist-rigging/husky-bull.html
www.treestuff.com/store/catalog.asp?category_id=3&item=1006#detail
which Stihl saw was that?
mark marchiafava 201 t
Probably the only time a guy can say "so much for that rubber" and have it be followed with a string of cure words.
Looks like a victim of oak wilt from all the deadwood missing bark on the crown... would you say this is accurate?
I'm not sure, didn't really know anything about it back then.
Thanks for the response man. That oak wilt is a death sentence for red oaks and this appears to be a pin oak which is a member of the red oak family. Just curious, trees can speak a lot of things to us more so than the clients, I'm always wondering why they react to things the way they do. If that's true any red oak in that vicinity is at risk to contract the fungus as long as any wood for that tree is still in the area, even from the stump and the root system for a considerable amount of distance. Job security baby!
aww man that poor gorgeous tree
yeah, children in Africa could have eaten that tree..sad
You’re right, it was a beautiful tree but sometimes the proximity to someone’s home or something like that is just too close or the tree is starting to rot and drop limbs.
Would you want this thing coming through the roof of your house in a really bad storm or tornado 🌪?
Just some things to think about.
It’s not like these guys are taking down whole swaths of old growth.
Cool vid Human, well done sir!!👍
ty =)
hey human do you have any extra climbing gear you would sell for cheap always wanted to get into climbing I'm a logger who has 3 kids and a wife just don't have the money to buy new stuff right now
Sorry, I keep everything just in case
Ah man you got wood for my Stove! Thanks man, just leave it out front. :) joking aside great job, love watching you work.
lol, thanks. You need wood? More than welcome to it, just gotta come grab it from us at the job, less we have to haul, lol.
+Human hum.... would it be worth it to drive down from northern Minnesota...... do most tree services allow an every day guy, with a pickup truck and chainsaw, to take wood from a sight? I have never asked?
Human That would be a hell of a fuel bill for fire wood :). but thanks for the offer :)
+flytyer232 I meant job site, not "sight"
I have people come up to me fairly regularly and ask for the wood, and have yet to turn anyone down. If we're short at the shop I'm sure I'd have to say no, hasn't happened yet though. Can't hurt to ask if you've got a crew working nearby!
Nice job, thing was massive. Surprised you guys didn't get a crane.
We did, but didn't have any access. Just used it to load the logs from the yard once they were bucked to 3 ton or so pieces.
Just found your channel today and it’s awesome brother! Im a veteran myself (I was actually in the Air Force and medically retired after 12years, unlike your Pararescue college roommate 😂.. funny story though). I was wondering how you went from the Navy to felling trees? I stuck pretty close to what I did when I was in: I went from working on old school equipment to pharmaceutical equipment. Huge difference working for someone that has money, doing more with less during the Obama years burnt a lot of people out and the smart ones got out, they were where I was stationed anyway.
How do you deal with all these people correcting you and telling you how to do your job? It would drive nuts!
Stay safe brother! I want to cut down all my pine trees that are dead 2/3rds of the way up now after watching your channel! Lol
Yeah, everyone is an expert on the internet, lol, you just learn to ignore them =)
Keep up the good videos brother! Love watching them 👍🏼🇺🇸
Great video. awsome work from the bucket.
Awesome video brother
Great video, bit rough on the lawn but itll grow back
lol, understatement there. Rented a crane for it, but didn't have a spot to get close enough to lift the sections out. Just bucked it on the ground then lifted'em out with the crane. Some real craters, filled them back in nicely though, brought a whole bunch of dirt in along with what we brought to fill in the stump cavity.
What's a crane like that go for in your area?
I believe it's close to $700 a day. Save way more than that in reduced labor costs though, well worth it depending on the tree.
Who runs it? One of your people?
Robert Sheffey our owner tim, he has his CDL which is required for that crane, anything bigger and you need an operator's license
7:32 freefall, and 7:40 roped . Not very comfy with the size of wood you are dropping, while directly above your hoist truck.
Sure its roped down, but if that rope were to fail in any way, it would sure put one heck of a divot in your truck!
Very nice love the videos!
thanks =)
Not yet my friend!!
great job again
Great video human... is seeing you
Thanks Lon =) You missing our wonderful weather yet? lol
Beautiful fire wood
Lot of good fire wood red oak
That 200t rips
Using a jlg crawler boom lift
That grass got destroyed!!!!!! I can't tolerate that shit.. you better have put some topsoil and seeds after that.
yeah man! high five! y'all play with a crane? That oak had hypoxylon canker on it in the top. sure makes em brittle.
Sometimes, if a tree is big enough the boss rents one and crane it down. I had to google hypoxylon canker, thanks for making me learn!
Hypoxylon is super sketch. Very unpredictable. I was surprised those big pieces were holding up the way they did during rigging!
good work
Good job👍🏻
Oaks can survive many lightning strikes, there was no need to cut it down
It wasn't cut because of lightning, it was cut because it feels good to cut big trees, and it triggers people like you, so it's a win win situation.
Irish Ladd123 for what ever reason lightnings attracted to oaks it's the most likely tree to be struck by lightning
Being from out West I find that statement funny, pines and redwoods tend to get struck here since our oaks are so short comparatively. Although in other parts of the country I can understand why oaks get hit a lot since they are usually the tallest trees in the area.
Yeah the Oak could have survived.....the roof and people under the dead portions...well not so much.
That and many oak trees suffer from heart rot. Note the brown core of the tree and the many hollow spots. This is a dangerous tree that needed to be cut down.
good show! from a bucket truck.
you guys fucked that lawn up
Awesome
A monster
wow
ez with a lift
Damn 2 days that tree was big but not 2 days big you're just slow