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116. Morning Hike to Build a Helipad | also a cool mossy creek

  Рет қаралды 7,575

Bjarne Butler

Bjarne Butler

Күн бұрын

The most powerful felling wedge today is now available. With increased lifting power over other wedges.
The PowerWedge, limited supply, get a sweet deal at:
www.woodboss.c...
www.Trigvi.com - Forestry Forum for lumberjacks
My videos are edited by the talented Bieke Vandaele. You can check out her website here. www.biekevandae...

Пікірлер: 33
@DrTubeman
@DrTubeman Ай бұрын
I like when you ramble Bjarne, listening to your knowledge and reasoning for doing what you do is to me a big part of the appeal of why I watch your reels. Cheers Fella, keep rambling and meandering...
@mattbrown7483
@mattbrown7483 Ай бұрын
Bjarne, your content is always interesting. You do it for a living so it may not seem as interesting to you, but we enjoy it. It's like a chef who cooks a meal but doesn't think it tastes as good as he intended, but to the diner its delicious.
@davefran01
@davefran01 Ай бұрын
His endless curiosity and interest in everything is amazing.thanks
@michaelhertwig4528
@michaelhertwig4528 Ай бұрын
Stay safe with all those snags! I got marked up pretty badly in 2004 by a big aspen poplar snag that hit me. 30 pieces of titanium and 28 inches of incisions later, I am still sawing. Quite a miracle. God bless.
@oldmanmosh6056
@oldmanmosh6056 Ай бұрын
I love it when you build pads...like you've said many times each one is different...it'll be awesome to watch every build...thanks
@timothymilam732
@timothymilam732 Ай бұрын
My question is what's the engineer doing during all the time y'all are falling and ripping planks outta the timber. As this is like the forth pad building video you've uploaded. Occasionally you show the engineers with your coworker as y'all are hiking to the location, but they melt into the bush when the saws come down from above. I'd think they'd be right in there doing whatever they could to get things completed. Because there's nothing worse in my opinion to just be sitting around doing absolutely nothing except boredom. That turns a 8 hour day into 6 days straight nonstop boredom, and that's makes you feel like I mentioned above Makes a long day seem endless leaving you more exhausted than hard days work. Don't tell me that's not their job description, because that's BS, especially put in the middle of nowhere. Plus having a Hand doing nothing but drawing a full days wages just to hold someone's hand and lead them to the location. Most everyone should be able to go in at one location and then find they're way to the location where works to be done. Because if you work in the forest,then you should know how to move to a location where someone monitors that those locations as they fly over numerous times.
@ervinslens
@ervinslens Ай бұрын
Outstanding filming man!
@IRONHORSE427RACING
@IRONHORSE427RACING Ай бұрын
Were still with you buddy....
@Telephony954
@Telephony954 Ай бұрын
Most of us, like yourself, have such a deep respect for the gifts of the wild areas you log in. These are amazing places with a splendor not found anywhere in the Galaxie, except right where you are standing. I dig the tree falling. but I realize what it brings to the forests. No way around having to earn a living. Thanks for sharing. Be well.
@lambadalou
@lambadalou Ай бұрын
Great movie 🎥 Bjarne 👍👍 Those Hem/Bal snags can be treacherous. I found them especially bad after the first big rains in the Fall, they soak that water up like a sponge and become so top heavy that the slightest movement can have them toppling straight down 😬 Don’t miss that part at all Stay Safe Brother ✊
@leonardryan8723
@leonardryan8723 Ай бұрын
Axe handle made for hitting wedges around corner Bjarne 😊lol . Great video buddy . A lot of RAM 🐏 PIPE ( dead wood 🪵) remember THINK SAFETY! 😊
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Tanks for taking the time to show us your wonderful nature ❤
@joegreenwood1443
@joegreenwood1443 Ай бұрын
The whole time you were hiking in all I could think of was bees. It sure looked like some good country for some bald faced. It's always better to be the engine rather than the caboose in that situation. Thank you for the video.
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Cool mine friend!
@1944chevytruck
@1944chevytruck Ай бұрын
cool!
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Loggers paradise ❤
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Your a positive good man
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Like you said... Easy one! Hihhihihihi
@sr7289
@sr7289 Ай бұрын
Awesome new phone bjarne, hello from Vermont usa. Scott wishing you good luck stay healthy
@danrobsonjr247
@danrobsonjr247 Ай бұрын
I know what you mean about the smell of devels club . Granted in Northern California we didn't have the extent of it that you have but we had our shair of it . That's one of the things I miss about the mountains out west the smell of real timber especially fresh cut wood . Silver tip fir was the best it always smelled like Christmas . Doug fir and lodge pole where second red cedar and sugar pine where third ponderosa pine was ok white fir had its own smell especially the older trees a musty almost pee smell that partly gave it its more colorful logger name that and the fact the water it was usually full of smelled just like pee . Maple really didn't have much of a smell but the black oak had a strong oak tannin smell the strongest of the 3 oak species we had white and live oak . I could tell whe the seasons where about to change too just before spring the Doug fir would start pitching out and you could smell it before other trees it did that just after it snowed on the dog wood trees when they where in bloom and they smelled like wet dog . In summer it was the smell of dust hot brush and wild fire smoke . Fall had a damp moldy smell to the air of old plants and dead leaves and it's when the cedars pitched out and the Doug fir did a second time so you could when close to them smell fresh cut cedar and fir . Winter had a metallic steel smell especially just before it snowed sometimes 2 days befor it snowed . Creeks and rivers no matter the time of year always had a damp wet smell . Out hear in Missouri we don't have that . In spring you smell cattle being moved crops being sprayed and new grass being cut . Summer fresh cut grass and like spring the smell of rain . Fall you smell dead old musty leaves and winter has the same steel smel and it gets really strong before it gets below zero . . The only wood hear that smells any good are the Eastern white pine what few there are the Easter red cedar and the oaks and black walnut . The rest of the hardwoods don't really have much of a smell to them . But I miss the smell of logging in the summer the most fresh cut wood and brush fresh turned over dirt and the dust of the landings from the skidders and loaders running around and trucks going up and down the dirt roads . That and in the mid eluvatuins on a hot summer day the smell of mountain misery / bear clover you could smell its strong pungent smell for miles around . It smelled like home . It's too bad it doesent grow below 2,500 feet . It's a mid elevation plant 5,500-2,500 feet elevation . Missouri is mostly at 1,100 feet or 900 feet in elevation it's highest point a meer hill 1,700 feet . I do miss the high mountains . But we have freedom and that is why we left California to have freedom .
@garyhead577
@garyhead577 Ай бұрын
Great video with your new camera. What kind and model is it? I love the country. I'm in the interior around Salmon Arm/Shuswap and sometimes there are pockets of dank cedar groves much like the coast. I love watching your videos early before I get outta bed..
@eddyarundale1566
@eddyarundale1566 Ай бұрын
👋🏻
@OneRoundDown
@OneRoundDown Ай бұрын
Mr Clean Mr Clean, heading up Shitz Creek without a paddle or a gold pan 😂.
@dolanschmidt356
@dolanschmidt356 Ай бұрын
What kind of camera are you using
@SeeUsFly
@SeeUsFly Ай бұрын
Video resolution is only 1080p -- not so good as 4k or 2k even.
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Do you have GPS tracking on you?
@Alexhulk
@Alexhulk Ай бұрын
Drinking push ups
@dnggusam4382
@dnggusam4382 Ай бұрын
What kind new phone you got
@petepeterson4540
@petepeterson4540 Ай бұрын
A lot of wild ginseng
@AP-qf9ng
@AP-qf9ng Ай бұрын
I assume you have Ticks where you are logging and was wondering how bad they are and how you deal with them on a daily basis. I'm in the southeastern U.S. and they are terrible this time of year.
@lambadalou
@lambadalou Ай бұрын
The ticks in British Columbia tend to be more prevalent in the leafy trees (deciduous) while all of our timber cutting is in a coniferous forest 🌲. So normally ticks aren’t really an issue
@AP-qf9ng
@AP-qf9ng Ай бұрын
@lambadalou I have to assume the deer stick to the deciduous forest more than coniferous, which would explain the tick dispersion.
@lambadalou
@lambadalou Ай бұрын
@@AP-qf9ng oh there’s ticks out there just not as many. I worked in the industry for over 20 years and never once saw a tick. Horseflies are our nemesis lol
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