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Be careful it doesn't roll on you.
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There is unrest in the forest,
There is trouble with the tree. |
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Seriously though, as said before: get the weight off the right side (tree top). Work slowly, make sure you have a scoot route. Les |
Rent a gas-powered pole saw to stay away from it. The stuff on the right side may roll as you remove it and work on the trunk right to left, especially at the pole it's resting on.
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I would pull it off the post first, chain and pull it with your tractor or whatever, assuming you don't mind killing that fence. Then it can't fall off its precarious perch at an inopportune time. Then you can cut the whole thing up on the ground. I think Paul is right about a lot of weight on the branch, but that fencepost looks buckled some, and is bearing weight too. Pole saw would be good to keep you out of harms way while working on smaller pieces. It is going to start raining again tomorrow, so you might need to wait for a little bit of dry weather. Where is that, out by Los Lagos off Auburn Folsom Rd? |
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The b1tch, i'd punish it first.
As said above make sure it doesn't roll on you. And it may right itself once the trunk is cut. Sadly there was a case of a guys little girls playing in the hollow of a large stump and the trunk righted itself when the tree was chopped off :( |
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that guy didn't |
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Right to left in 3 foot sections. Fun job if you have a good saw.
G |
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Whatever you do, please film it. Preferably with the following opening monologue:
[starts chainsaw] Rod: "Hold my beer.....watch this." :D |
Pics or it did not happen!
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Where I live you would have to call the tree department of the town to get permission, then apply for a permit before they would let you cut the tree.
After that, by law, you have to replace the tree with the same caliper (trunk width). One exception, cleanup after a hurricane. But then, you still have to replace the caliper..... Last storm I had to replace 1 tree with 6 smaller ones. Did I just go PARF? |
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Fortunately that wont apply because we own the property where the tree is planted. That fence is not the property line, its just a hot wire to keep our horses in. :p |
It almost certainly will apply if that is a valley oak
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Ok, you win.. I'll replant a tree that weighs thousands of pounds on the edge of a creek where there is not enough dirt to keep it standing just to be a good little citizen. Then I watch it fall again and do it all over. SmileWavy |
I'm sure you can replant somewhere else - contact the state or county or whomever & see. You might get free saplings out of it. Your livestock want some shade anyway.
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