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weekend wOrrier
 
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The PPOT ULTIMATE tree cutting thread!

I discovered PPOT about a year ago, and some of my favorite posts are about tree cutting.

Who can forget the thread about the neighbor who was about to drop the tree onto another neighbor's house?

Developing situation - I doubt this will end well...

Rivetting I tell you!!!! So tonight I submit my own pathetic offering, a scraggly pine which threatens my daughter's playhouse. It it nothing more than a cheap dead pine, but is pitched towards the playhouse, so I will need to make it fall in a completely different direction than mother nature intends, or DOOM will befall the playhouse. This won't happen though for TWO reasons- 1. I payed $$$ coin for that playhouse, and 2. I assembled it (total biatttchhhhh!) -stay tuned my friends as I warp physics and do the impossible because I am too cheap to call a professional!
I do encourage people to contribute their own tree cutting adventures to this thread as to compile an ultimate pelican "how to" or "how not to" down a tree!



Tomorrow I strike- and by posting to PPOT, that gives me some incentive to actually get out and do it in the next week or two!

Old 07-11-2015, 05:39 PM
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That tree will fall right on the treehouse. There is no way you can notch it to not fall on the playhouse. The bend of the tree brings the weight of it right over the playhouse. You can bend gravity if you are really good but you cannot defy the laws of physics.
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Old 07-11-2015, 05:48 PM
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(Not an expert nor a hotel advertisement. Die at your own risk)

The bottom 2/3 of the trunk leans towards the playhouse.
That part is solid trunk.
Enough to support human weight. I hope.

The top 1/3 leans away.
Heavy with foliage and tight quarters to rotate. An electric pole saw extension might help there.
That is the most dangerous part.
Leave a 24" stump on small branches to hang a rope off.

First invest in or rent quality professional climbing gear (spikes/harness/helmet/saw/wedges).
Better yet get a pro to 'advise'.

Drop the top third. Remove as much brush as possible before.
Piece by piece. Go slow.
You have the rest of your life IN TRACTION to think about this.
Take a week or a month.
That is the most dangerous part.

That high up.....the trunk will tend to vibrate and flick you off like an insect.

Then rope away sections until there is enough space to drop the main trunk.
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Meanwhile other things are still happening.

Last edited by john70t; 07-11-2015 at 07:50 PM..
Old 07-11-2015, 06:01 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by john70t View Post
You have the rest of your life to think about this.
Which may not be very much time if things go awry!
Old 07-11-2015, 06:41 PM
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I've had to cut down a couple of 60' popal trees that were going to interfere with my power line.
They were leaning toward the power line.
What I did was to tie a rope( 150' of climbing rope) as high on the trunk as possible, put a screw anchor in the ground where I wanted the tree to fall, attached a pulley to the screw anchor, feed the rope through the pulley and tie to my truck at 90 degrees from line of tree fall.
I then notched tree in direction of fall, tension the rope, back cut tree until tree starts to fall, add tension to rope and finish cut.
Every time I use this method the tree drops right on the pulley....
The main thing is to be certain you have the space for the tree to fall.
A helper in the truck is, well, helpful......
Be careful and aware of the situation.....
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Old 07-11-2015, 06:49 PM
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Old 07-11-2015, 07:00 PM
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Much different than the one I posted. I had a lot of room for a lot of error. I don't see that here. I'd hire this one out.
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Old 07-11-2015, 07:22 PM
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I watched a guy do this to one of my trees that was leaning toward a shed. I would not try it myself, but here goes.
He cut a notch out of the tree to make himself a wedge. I'm thinking a piece of 2x4 would work for this, as it was about 4" thick at the thickest part. On your tree, he would notch it on the side facing the camera, to make a hinge so it would fall toward the camera. He would cut the notch, backcut the tree, and when it starts falling and the center of gravity changes, he would jam the wedge into the left side of the notch. When the tree hit the wedge it had a momentary WTF? hesitation, then fell a few degrees away from perpendicular to the hinge.
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Old 07-11-2015, 09:04 PM
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https://www.facebook.com/fred.grosshaupt/videos/733503663379605/?l=7016471530256524449
Last summer, my good friend Bob, (also a 930 owner ) showed me a new way to drop trees
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Old 07-12-2015, 02:46 AM
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Farm it out to Thom's neighbor
Old 07-12-2015, 02:52 AM
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Go back in time, drop tree before building playhouse.

I would probably hire that one out.

My neighbor had a huge poplar dropped this year. I was surprised how reasonable the price was for the amount of labor and equipment involved.
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Old 07-12-2015, 04:39 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KC911 View Post
Farm it out to Thom's neighbor
Ha! Well to honor that guy, I need to post an update. This morning I realized I had no throwball to set a line- so I improvised:
Attempt one was my wife's garden trowel:


Pros: good weight/ balance/ throws well
Cons:got stuck in tree. Wife unaware she is now minus one garden tool

So I got lazy and grabbed the next available thing in the garage- a clamp:



Pro's: It was sitting right there, about the right size, throws well
Cons: gets stuck in branches even worse than garden spade

Here's a picture of my morning progress (Tree 2:Ron-0):




Then the craftsman wrench "eureka" moment:



Check out the angle on the tree as the wrench dangles straight down!
String up:


Now I need to go buy some new rope- all my old stuff was getting rotten.
Old 07-12-2015, 04:43 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fastfredracing View Post
https://www.facebook.com/fred.grosshaupt/videos/733503663379605/?l=7016471530256524449
Last summer, my good friend Bob, (also a 930 owner ) showed me a new way to drop trees
That's what I do, with a cut if the trunk is more than 8" or so, or a notch if I'm really worried about the direction.
Old 07-12-2015, 05:16 AM
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skinny, but long. that tree.
you gonna post a video?
Old 07-12-2015, 07:55 AM
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update:
Got the lines in place from two angles. I've got a good angle on the trunk and am just about ready to go. Need to get my wife to video. I want to swing it around the cherry canopy and into the open yard. On a scale of 1-10 pucker factor is a 1.5. Feeling confident(ish).







Old 07-12-2015, 09:13 AM
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There is no way you can notch or wedge that tree enough to not fall on the treehouse. The weight of the trunk is just too much. Ifyou try at best you'll knock down the playhouse. At worst you will get badly hurt in the process. That is a complex tree. You should not in any stretch of the imagination try it yourself. A pro with proper tools will probably cut it in sections until it gets short enough to handle. Thinking you can handle that tree is like thinking you can take your car straight to the Indy 500 and compete with their pros. Your chances of success and death or dismemberment are about the same.
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Old 07-12-2015, 09:14 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LEAKYSEALS951 View Post
update:
Got the lines in place from two angles. I've got a good angle on the trunk and am just about ready to go. Need to get my wife to video. I want to swing it around the cherry canopy and into the open yard. On a scale of 1-10 pucker factor is a 1.5. Feeling confident(ish).

Whoa! Given your "aiming point", why do you have a come along on the angle to the left? I would think that line will tend to pull things in that direction.

Best
Les
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Old 07-12-2015, 09:20 AM
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Whoa! Given your "aiming point", why do you have a come along on the angle to the left? I would think that line will tend to pull things in that direction.

Best
Les
Thanks- That line is a safety so if the tree falls back towards the playhouse, it will spin it around the radius of the trunk the come along is attached to so the pine will clear the cherry canopy and land it in the yard. It does look weird though!
Old 07-12-2015, 09:50 AM
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Won't the tension on the lines instantly disappear once the tree moves even a foot or two? Making it as if the lines weren't even there at all?

Oh. The answer is yes.

Good luck to you!!
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Old 07-12-2015, 09:55 AM
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weekend wOrrier
 
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Originally Posted by Gogar View Post
Won't the tension on the lines instantly disappear once the tree moves even a foot or two? Making it as if the lines weren't even there at all?

Oh. The answer is yes.

Good luck to you!!
Yep!- Infact that is just what I am counting on for the line oldE mentioned. I considered hanging a weight on the main pull line, but have such a good angle on the tree that I feel confident once it starts to go, it will go in the right direction.

Old 07-12-2015, 10:02 AM
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