Bought myself a new forest axe to use in the woods. Primarely to fell dead stading and gather wood for the fire. This video is probably the most instructional iv'e seen. Keep up the good work!
I had to fell a tree in my garden, so I watched your video and it took me literally 5 minutes and the tree was down. It fell perfectly. Thanks a lot for the excellent information.
I saw your Comment and it bolster my confidence to try my first axe felling. I was not able to get the 5 min experience that you report. I ran into some issues, after I started chopping the face cut, I realized it’s leaning a bit more than I first thought, in the wrong direction. i luckily had some rope and the tree was relatively manageable. I did get it down safe in sound. 😊
@@vibeslide haha I would have thought so! But mine was maybe a hair smaller than 35 cm!?! It was dead standing oak so it was really hard. Might have also had to do with my bad aim and very tired arms.
Thank you for this tutorial. I am not physically fit and I don't have a good axe, but finally managed to take out one of the 2 inch thick trunks in my yard. Once my forearm stops being sore and I can safely grip the axe again, I'm gonna hit the other 4!
Thanks for the video. Recently purchased some land in the mountains. I need to clear a small space for a cabin/yurt structure and need some firewood too. Never really used an axe before and this was a great tutorial. Love your environmental message as well.
Thank you so much for this video. I have really appreciated how you've kept safety paramount, it is most important at all times that everyone gets home safe and sound. Also the keen focus on ethics regarding target selection and the associated considerations of habitat and environment accordingly. Cheers, all the best.
This is a great tutorial, thank you for putting it out. I really enjoyed you addressing the legal and ethical implications of felling a tree as well. I have some downed trees I need to clean up and this, and your other videos, are great references for safely doing that.
I really love your channel, Richard. It's going from strength to strength and I really hope that you manage to secure way more subscribers in the future, as your content, your cinematography and your all round effort is well deserving of it. I used to be really into outdoor activities and backwoods skills, and grew up up spending at least as much time outside in the great outdoors as I did inside, but I suffered a serious spinal injury following a white water kayaking accident back in 2013, so now whilst I am no longer able to enjoy these sorts of outdoor pursuits myself, I still get an awful lot of enjoyment watching folk like you doing what you love and pipping the outdoors into my house in a virtual sense. Through videos like this, I am able to experience some of the passion that I used to have once more. Keep up the great work!
Great video! Great shooting and editing. Thanks for doing replays while you went over specifics of what happened. Can’t wait to watch more and tackle some smaller trees that have intimidated me before now as someone who hasn’t yet learned to use a chainsaw.
Excellent tutorial, thank you. What axes do you use/recommend? Make, weight, length? I'm looking for a versatile mid-sized axe that can be used 1 or 2 handed.
I really appreciate the ending speech. I've only cut down dead trees or cut up already fallen trees, but yeah it hurts to think about killing something 100s of years old.
This is so much more that I was expecting to see. I have to cut down couple trees that are to close to the house and I've never did that before. But I don't really want to do that, and I was very happy to hear your ethical considerations because they touch exactly the bad feeling that I have in doing so... Thanks anyway, great video
It isn't always a simple decision to make, we manage and help with the management of a few woodlands and the decision to fell tree is always well thought through and planned out for the health of the woodland overall. Glad that you enjoyed the video, and thank you for commenting.
I want to pinpoint one thing that you did naturally, that person should go out of the falling line EVEN BEHIND the falling tree, and occupy a diagonal position for additional safety. Because if you did at least some miscalculations or encountered some unpredicted force the cut end may bounce off into you. So please keep your distance from the tree and stay not directly behind, but diagonally when it starts to fall.
This was well done. 👍 Concisely informative while being thoughtful & thorough. I'm attempting to write a story involving North American settlers homesteading. Having next to no practical experience in bushcraft i've been trying to research the average time required to fell & sned (which i'm about to learn about in your following video) trees of various diameters that would be used for buildings, fencing, firewood, etc. So far, i haven't got close to an answer. People talk a lot about variables or i get times for a chainsaw not an axe. Can you please tell me how long it took you to fell & sned this tree? It's a good size for me to work from. Thanks muchly in advance if you answer, this is going from frustrating to highly annoying.
This is currently the best comment we've ever had. A softwood tree like this could be felled and snedded in less than20-30 minutes with a sharp axe and skilled operator. Bucking/cross cutting will take longer, and hand saws would make the job easier. Maybe. A hardwood (oak etc) would probably be 2-3x that time depending on size and situation. Straighter trees are easier to fell and sned.
@@originaloutdoors Thanks muchly for answering my question, it will help me figure out a few things. I'm glad you liked my comment. I've watched the rest of your videos in this series but have not yet left comments, which i will do for the algorithms. You really should get more views. Good luck with your channel.
Another reason to cut trees off at about waist height is that the stumps are EASY to see and as easy to avoid as the whole tree. If you cut the tree off too low, you don't see the stump in your peripheral vision as easily, therefore making it easier to trip on.
Yeah, we do that in some areas of the woodland we manage. In other areas we try to cut it as low as possible then build the soil back up to cover it - but that's mostly for vehicle access.
@@originaloutdoors Absolutely. That's usually my goal, but I typically fell until things get cluttered, then limb and buck, then skid/clean up, then clean up stumps. Being a "one man show" leads to optimized processes that aren't necessarily optimal. I also try to save all the ground-level cutting til the end, since soil/grit takes a toll on one side of the saw chain, making felling and bucking harder.
Is it legal to go into the woods and start chopping trees in the UK to make shelter or fire to survive? I see so much info out there on making fire, surviving, chopping down trees to make long term shelter etc. But how does that apply in the UK?
Thank you very much for this free tutorial.I am a 53 year old woman,just 'sick' and bored of hiring workers,who are absolutely convinced that women are for 'soft' -and night-time,lol!'-'jobs'.I've already felled(no,it wasn't easy for me but I did it). Detailed explanations and 'holistic' approach to the matter.Brilliant! (Are there materials to use for the fireplace so that felling tree is avoided,such as compressed leaves?).
Hi im really interested in starting to learn how to fell trees, ive recently purchased a couple axes and was wondering what the best legal and most ethical way is to start out is with our doing anything to get in trouble if you have any tips that would be great
Excellent video. In the USA we call limbing etc a downed tree “Bucking”. Don’t ask me why. I will now snatch your Brit word and try it on my dad. He may look at me funny. Thants OK. 🤣😂👍
Speaking of safety, 6:41. Be aware of your surroundings!! Where is that axe going if you loose your grip? Camera person in in a serious no no zone!! Great video all around!
Im watching this because i started cutting a tree how i thought was correctly (it was), and my dad corrected me and told me if i did cut it down, it would hit something. He was wrong. I was right. He was dumb. I was smart.
To anyone who is thinking about getting started, there are no words to describe how gratifying this experience is. Focus, force, perseverance
Bought myself a new forest axe to use in the woods. Primarely to fell dead stading and gather wood for the fire. This video is probably the most instructional iv'e seen. Keep up the good work!
I had to fell a tree in my garden, so I watched your video and it took me literally 5 minutes and the tree was down. It fell perfectly.
Thanks a lot for the excellent information.
Glad to be of unexpected service!
I saw your Comment and it bolster my confidence to try my first axe felling. I was not able to get the 5 min experience that you report. I ran into some issues, after I started chopping the face cut, I realized it’s leaning a bit more than I first thought, in the wrong direction. i luckily had some rope and the tree was relatively manageable. I did get it down safe in sound. 😊
@@dovetailblues might have to do with the tree's size. Mine was about 35cm across 😉
@@vibeslide haha I would have thought so! But mine was maybe a hair smaller than 35 cm!?! It was dead standing oak so it was really hard. Might have also had to do with my bad aim and very tired arms.
Felling a tree clean and straight is probably one of the most satisfying things you can do in the woods
Thank you for this tutorial. I am not physically fit and I don't have a good axe, but finally managed to take out one of the 2 inch thick trunks in my yard. Once my forearm stops being sore and I can safely grip the axe again, I'm gonna hit the other 4!
That was a great tutorial .. i liked the different camera angles too .. also the important legal advice
Glad you liked it!
This tutorial helped me describe lumberjacks cutting trees in the book that I am currently writing. Extremely interesting and informing video, thanks!
How'd the book turn out. I'm also here because of writing a book.
Thanks for the video. Recently purchased some land in the mountains. I need to clear a small space for a cabin/yurt structure and need some firewood too. Never really used an axe before and this was a great tutorial. Love your environmental message as well.
Brilliant: both informative and restful.... Well presented.
Thanks!
you forgot to yell " ... TIMBER ! "
Thank you so much for this video. I have really appreciated how you've kept safety paramount, it is most important at all times that everyone gets home safe and sound. Also the keen focus on ethics regarding target selection and the associated considerations of habitat and environment accordingly. Cheers, all the best.
This is a great tutorial, thank you for putting it out. I really enjoyed you addressing the legal and ethical implications of felling a tree as well. I have some downed trees I need to clean up and this, and your other videos, are great references for safely doing that.
I really love your channel, Richard. It's going from strength to strength and I really hope that you manage to secure way more subscribers in the future, as your content, your cinematography and your all round effort is well deserving of it. I used to be really into outdoor activities and backwoods skills, and grew up up spending at least as much time outside in the great outdoors as I did inside, but I suffered a serious spinal injury following a white water kayaking accident back in 2013, so now whilst I am no longer able to enjoy these sorts of outdoor pursuits myself, I still get an awful lot of enjoyment watching folk like you doing what you love and pipping the outdoors into my house in a virtual sense. Through videos like this, I am able to experience some of the passion that I used to have once more. Keep up the great work!
Ever since your accident, what have you been doing in replacement of outdoor activities?
I love this series of videos, thanks for breaking it down so well.
Glad you like them!
You deserve 100 of thousands of followers. Here's to adding to the algorithm for you. Thanks for the video
Great video! Great shooting and editing. Thanks for doing replays while you went over specifics of what happened. Can’t wait to watch more and tackle some smaller trees that have intimidated me before now as someone who hasn’t yet learned to use a chainsaw.
thank u for being so rsponsible and considerate with this video
Thanks for being such a wonderful teacher!
Awesome video! You described the felling process in great detail. Thank you!
Thanks! And I like your channel name
I wish this was the first video i saw on the topic, wouldve made things a lot easier
Excellent tutorial, thank you. What axes do you use/recommend? Make, weight, length? I'm looking for a versatile mid-sized axe that can be used 1 or 2 handed.
Great video. Detailed and precise. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you for a thorough and clear video! :)
Glad it was helpful!
I really appreciate the ending speech. I've only cut down dead trees or cut up already fallen trees, but yeah it hurts to think about killing something 100s of years old.
Everything has a cost - as long as we are honest about it then we can make good decisions.
This is so much more that I was expecting to see. I have to cut down couple trees that are to close to the house and I've never did that before. But I don't really want to do that, and I was very happy to hear your ethical considerations because they touch exactly the bad feeling that I have in doing so... Thanks anyway, great video
It isn't always a simple decision to make, we manage and help with the management of a few woodlands and the decision to fell tree is always well thought through and planned out for the health of the woodland overall. Glad that you enjoyed the video, and thank you for commenting.
Exceptional teaching!
I want to pinpoint one thing that you did naturally, that person should go out of the falling line EVEN BEHIND the falling tree, and occupy a diagonal position for additional safety.
Because if you did at least some miscalculations or encountered some unpredicted force the cut end may bounce off into you.
So please keep your distance from the tree and stay not directly behind, but diagonally when it starts to fall.
Excellent points. Time for an in-depth tutorial on felling hazards maybe?
@@originaloutdoors I would love to watch :3
the ethics bit at the end made me subscribe. thanks for the great video.
This was well done. 👍 Concisely informative while being thoughtful & thorough. I'm attempting to write a story involving North American settlers homesteading. Having next to no practical experience in bushcraft i've been trying to research the average time required to fell & sned (which i'm about to learn about in your following video) trees of various diameters that would be used for buildings, fencing, firewood, etc. So far, i haven't got close to an answer. People talk a lot about variables or i get times for a chainsaw not an axe. Can you please tell me how long it took you to fell & sned this tree? It's a good size for me to work from. Thanks muchly in advance if you answer, this is going from frustrating to highly annoying.
This is currently the best comment we've ever had.
A softwood tree like this could be felled and snedded in less than20-30 minutes with a sharp axe and skilled operator. Bucking/cross cutting will take longer, and hand saws would make the job easier. Maybe.
A hardwood (oak etc) would probably be 2-3x that time depending on size and situation. Straighter trees are easier to fell and sned.
@@originaloutdoors Thanks muchly for answering my question, it will help me figure out a few things. I'm glad you liked my comment. I've watched the rest of your videos in this series but have not yet left comments, which i will do for the algorithms. You really should get more views. Good luck with your channel.
Thank you for the detailed explanation.
thank you!🌳
Welcome!
International audience indeed(USA) great video I like how thorough you were and how you outlined the angles
I thought you had a bigger sub base cuz of the quality of the production. I was surprised when I saw 9k subs. You deserve all the subs.
Another reason to cut trees off at about waist height is that the stumps are EASY to see and as easy to avoid as the whole tree.
If you cut the tree off too low, you don't see the stump in your peripheral vision as easily, therefore making it easier to trip on.
Yeah, we do that in some areas of the woodland we manage. In other areas we try to cut it as low as possible then build the soil back up to cover it - but that's mostly for vehicle access.
@@originaloutdoors Absolutely. That's usually my goal, but I typically fell until things get cluttered, then limb and buck, then skid/clean up, then clean up stumps.
Being a "one man show" leads to optimized processes that aren't necessarily optimal.
I also try to save all the ground-level cutting til the end, since soil/grit takes a toll on one side of the saw chain, making felling and bucking harder.
Nice and clean. Good video. (:
Thank you! Cheers!
Great video
Video starts @ 6:30
After the caveats and safety advice...
fantastic video, your clean technique and clear safety advise is much appreciated
Glad you enjoyed it
thanks for the tutorial i am from denmarkl and i might fell a cristmas tree with my dad this year (im 19 years old)
Is it legal to go into the woods and start chopping trees in the UK to make shelter or fire to survive? I see so much info out there on making fire, surviving, chopping down trees to make long term shelter etc. But how does that apply in the UK?
Can this be done with a wedge axe?
Thank you very much for this free tutorial.I am a 53 year old woman,just 'sick' and bored of hiring workers,who are absolutely convinced that women are for 'soft' -and night-time,lol!'-'jobs'.I've already felled(no,it wasn't easy for me but I did it).
Detailed explanations and 'holistic' approach to the matter.Brilliant! (Are there materials to use for the fireplace so that felling tree is avoided,such as compressed leaves?).
Grazie, saluti dall'Italia, ciao!
awesome video! can anyone give me some info on the exact axes used in the video, ty
great video, you deserve more views
How to explain to somebody that cutting down an alive tree is ok on the spot and not make them question you about your actions: 1:09
Because: The Internet.
Hi im really interested in starting to learn how to fell trees, ive recently purchased a couple axes and was wondering what the best legal and most ethical way is to start out is with our doing anything to get in trouble if you have any tips that would be great
Start with dead trees
your accent is sooo cool!
I'll take that
Would it make any difference if the tree is dead and dry? I want to cut some dead trees to open space for new ones.
Dead trees can be more dangerous to cut, just be careful when it’s about to fall. It’s the same as a cutting a live tree with more caution
That was a good ass video appreciate the knowledge!
Thanks!
I saw no asses.
Thorough video, noice.
Excellent video. In the USA we call limbing etc a downed tree “Bucking”. Don’t ask me why. I will now snatch your Brit word and try it on my dad. He may look at me funny. Thants OK. 🤣😂👍
also you need to be aware of wind direction and speed cause it'll affect the direction the tree will fall..
🆒
Speaking of safety, 6:41. Be aware of your surroundings!! Where is that axe going if you loose your grip? Camera person in in a serious no no zone!! Great video all around!
Its best to do your bucking before you cut the limbs off. Processing a tree with an axe is different than using a powersaw.
Dude what an awesome vid thx
Im watching this because i started cutting a tree how i thought was correctly (it was), and my dad corrected me and told me if i did cut it down, it would hit something. He was wrong. I was right. He was dumb. I was smart.
I cut down big branches from our willow stump with a hatchet ouch it took soooooo long
Safety glasses
The safety talk straight into slow motion watching splinters flying towards your eyes with no eye protection was jarring.
that tree was very small
Wordy
The next one will be in mime - just for you.
What a cute toy, its almost like a real axe.
Thank you for your helpful input.
what a load of,,???????
Would love to see your video rebuttal
Simplified version - Keep wacking the tree with the axe and hope for the best it don’t fall on anyone.
Must destroy all trees and be unethical!!! Rawww lol😮😅 kidding !
way too long: waste of time