THIS VIDEO IS ABOUT FELLING A DEAD TREE AND SOME OF THE THINGS I KNOW ABOUT FELLING TREES IN GENERAL.
Пікірлер: 13
@smileyface59082 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate. Reminds me of my childhood.
@farminglifeaustralia67162 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching. John
@garyhaslam22176 жыл бұрын
some great tips john thanks for posting i always learn something when i watch one of your videos thank you gary
@farminglifeaustralia67166 жыл бұрын
Glad you got something out of it Gary thanks for the comment. John
@brendansmith9464 жыл бұрын
great aussie video - thanks mate
@farminglifeaustralia67164 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and commenting. John
@AttitudeAdjuster6 жыл бұрын
Farming Life Australia, Another Great Video and its funny I got given about 3 Truckloads of timber locally here so I spent yesterday on the Chainsaw and Excavator hauling stuff up and out of a poopy spot, they have no idea the Family and they dropped about 20 Trees in the Bush and how they did not get themselves killed is beyond me, Every single Tree went a different direction and laid on top of the others and my Short little legs scurrying up and over all the tangled mess with it as slick as owl snoot was not allot of fun so I worked half the day getting in there and just making the Ground somewhat safe. The Father in law said oh and that Ironbark up there with the termite nest you can drop and have that one to, its in striking distance of the House and 4 trees are all tangled in the Crown LMAO, Yeah no thanks I thoroughly enjoyed your video, You Run a dam fine saw which is lost allot of times as I have watched the so call professional loggers that can't run in the Power Bubble properly on brand new best quality saws, Great tips and I love your height demo as I have done so many things and then you watch the tape and go Doah But it was perfect, Some really good hard timber in that one will warm the House for a long time, Hey do you run a slow combustion stove at all? Sorry to ramble Matey and get off topic of your Great video but it really touched me as I love the bush and timber and saws. Yours Truly Garry
@farminglifeaustralia67166 жыл бұрын
G'day Garry yeah we have a slow combustion stove which probably seems a bit odd in FNQ but we are 2700 feet high and it gets down to 4 in winter sometimes, but 10 is common in winter. As far as the timber felling I don't claim to be an expert or even a authority on it just worked with people over the years with lots of experience. Its funny how things happen a mate from down the road rang me last night and said he wiped out another fence it was the chook pen last time he felled a tree and I was trying to explain how you can use a stick to tell the danger area when felling. We have cut up a lot of the dead tree and bought it home just the big stuff to cut and split now. john
@AttitudeAdjuster6 жыл бұрын
Lol, The First Tree I dropped was next to the Out house and the Old Cow Cocky was instructing on the importance of never cut your hinge and so forth and so on and I was cutting away and perfect hinge and drop but the Mongrel spun on the stump and just folded the very edge of the out house roof about 2 inches of it LOL but as you know the whole lot happened in slow motion, I am thinking cool I am doing well and just watched it turn HAHAHAHA, hey Gravity is always working once its in motion and then they rest is up for Grabs and a miss is as good as a mile I believe and well 2 inches on the corner doesn't really matter. I am looking forward to setting up a wood slow combustion stove I got here on the cheap out doors and do some cooking. WE can't laugh at those Mateys when it goes wrong as long as they only flatten stuff and not people.
@williamfairley25025 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great tips
@farminglifeaustralia67165 жыл бұрын
Glad you got something out of it thanks for taking the time to comment. John
@Stepinup3 жыл бұрын
Safety gear chainsaw above chest hight no scarfe not looking up