How to: Cut trees that lean hard! A few techniques to do it safer: Tips and tricks

  Рет қаралды 14,701

Strider Trees

Strider Trees

Ай бұрын

This skill is essential for safe and efficient removals, but as always. Practice low and slow with someone present to give clear instruction. There are lots of ways to get hurt cutting heavily leaning spars.
Josiah, the Tree_Strider is a contract climber and tree climbing Instructor focused on training the next generation of climbers, arborists and other tree workers in safer, more efficient work practices.
What is a skill or technique you would like explained? Let me know in the comments.
For those who would like to support the channel, the purchase of ANYTHING on Amazon after using my link is helpful, and the following list consists of Many of my favorite daily use equipment for climbing and rigging. All these are excellent pieces of gear you won’t regret to own!
For more long form content, please consider joining my channel as a paid member. There are some great resources there on sales and a couple other long form classes.
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬My Gear Picks▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
▬Climbing▬
Helmet: Pfanner Protos amzn.to/3xZMX71.
(THE BEST!! If you can find them, the integrated glasses are great)
Helmet Intercom: Cardo Packtalk Bold amzn.to/3exMvFo
Saddle: Edelrid TreeRex amzn.to/3UHVOHF
Gloves: ANSI A5 Cut resistant amzn.to/3uBySKZ
▬Saddle accessories▬
Favorite Carabiners:
Bulletproof Triple: amzn.to/3NxEqlL
EDELRID HMS Strike amzn.to/3p1Cc45
Oval Power 2500 Triple amzn.to/3VssGTI
Rock Exotica Transporter: amzn.to/3hgz1zr
CMI Shembiner : amzn.to/3hgYzMN
Petzl Zillon Lanyard : (my personal favorite ) amzn.to/3uE6XtB
Yale Steel Core Lanyard: amzn.to/3o5lvQu
Silky Tsurugi hand saw: amzn.to/3tvKcqA
Notch Quickie: amzn.to/306eAvB
My Climb Saw:
Milwaukee M18 top handle amzn.to/3JNyvGl
▬Climb System▬
Petzl zigzag (Best for beginners) amzn.to/3o3QFYw
Petzl Chicane (for SRT use) amzn.to/3o7itew
Rope:EDELRID Woodpecker amzn.to/3LNQqyf
Foot Ascender: amzn.to/3nrgp5u
Knee Ascender: amzn.to/3beZnhG
▬Rigging Equipment▬
Cmi Rope Jack: amzn.to/31qUlKq
Soft shackle: amzn.to/3jfCBaK
Notch portawrap: amzn.to/2Qob7Uf
Throw weight: Notch 14 Oz: amzn.to/3w3ObfJ
Throw Line: Tuefelberger Dynaglide: amzn.to/3ogU1Ym
Ultra Slings ( rigging rings and Arborist Block/Pulley): amzn.to/3fmGURds
X-Rigging Ring amzn.to/3wb2or1
Rigging with Pulling/Lifting : Pelican APE :amzn.to/3NDIYHi
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬Social▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Website stridertreegear.com
Instagram / tree_strider
Facebook / strider-tree-service-1...
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬Music Credits▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
www.streambeats.com/
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬

Пікірлер: 28
@McTree2013
@McTree2013 Ай бұрын
I've gotta say the way you explain yourself is very professional. There are so many other KZfaq tree guys who have just recently started tree work who are putting out tips and tricks vids that have no reason to be trying to teach anyone anything. Thanks for the time, and knowledge you share with all of us. Stay safe out there.
@spelunkerd
@spelunkerd Ай бұрын
I loved the way you gave us an explanatory sidebar regarding how the bar can be trapped in the falling segment and yank you off your stance.
@justinsnyder6256
@justinsnyder6256 Ай бұрын
Best one I've seen of yours yet.
@michaelnewman-ds3fr
@michaelnewman-ds3fr Ай бұрын
Thanks that was very helpful I appreciate the knowledge you have and willing to share!
@kcf955
@kcf955 Ай бұрын
Another great video!!! Never heard of this exact cut but it is very similar to a “Coos Bay” cut when falling HEAVY learners. Your two cuts are off vertical but Coos Bay are vertical, just like your floor joist example. Thank you!
@Stridertrees
@Stridertrees Ай бұрын
Oh cool, I’ll have to look that up I haven’t heard of the “Coos Bay” cut
@TheToolnut
@TheToolnut Ай бұрын
Coos Bay, that's where Larry Haun used to live. R.I.P Larry, a legend, 👍💪🔨🇺🇲🇮🇪
@Billster1955
@Billster1955 Ай бұрын
Great video. Thank you.
@randymarko486
@randymarko486 Ай бұрын
GREAT video. Thank you .
@Stridertrees
@Stridertrees Ай бұрын
You’re welcome!
@brissett
@brissett Ай бұрын
I needed this video yesterday lol
@Stridertrees
@Stridertrees Ай бұрын
It’s the video I wish I had years ago ! It took way too long to figure this out
@Kaizen747
@Kaizen747 Ай бұрын
Little by little. All my doubt are being cleared away with every video 😊
@robertstroh4803
@robertstroh4803 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. Sharp chain, do you round file or chisel bit?
@Stridertrees
@Stridertrees Ай бұрын
Both, but it depends on the situation
@user-pk3lp2qb7b
@user-pk3lp2qb7b Ай бұрын
If the top cut backwards to the bottom cut, the chain saw will be held on the overlap position instead of drop suddenly with the dropping log , is that correct? Thx
@ravenshield7823
@ravenshield7823 Ай бұрын
Really appreciate what you're doing it's more helpful than you know. I try to draw from all you tree guys, great teachers. I was just curious, on the log you are straddling, in this demonstration, if you had no other tie in point, and the branch went out a ways. What's your procedure for advancing down it, when it's at that low of an angle?
@Stridertrees
@Stridertrees Ай бұрын
Depends on lots of factors. It’s virtually never that I don’t have some kind of secondary attachment.
@ravenshield7823
@ravenshield7823 Ай бұрын
@@Stridertrees I guess I meant that you didn't have a secondary tie in point that was higher, so you couldn't really triangulate for stabilization. Is it acceptable to be Lanyard'd in and just scootch out?
@Stridertrees
@Stridertrees Ай бұрын
@@ravenshield7823if that’s your only option, then it can be made “safe” enough, but there’s no getting around it being awkward. You’d need to have a choking backup tie trailing behind the lanyard as well for a backup.
@ravenshield7823
@ravenshield7823 Ай бұрын
@@Stridertrees Right, ok, totally understood. I'm not trying to waste your time, I have a scenario where what I am asking is what I am trying to work out a plan for. The very large branch does increase back into a climbing angle, but I need to get past a section I'd rather not limb walk, being so new to the field. I've got more study time than actual experience time in climbing but am making strides. Confidence in my setup, and gear is really something that needs application to become trusted counterpart. And obviously not getting in too deep, but you need those challenges to grow. So I'm going lol. Thanks for your thoughts on the situation.
@Woodrats272xp
@Woodrats272xp Ай бұрын
👍
@LoyalClimber
@LoyalClimber Ай бұрын
How do you like that Milwaukee?
@andrewream5279
@andrewream5279 Ай бұрын
Have you ever tried a double undercut using the same method that you are using but just cut to your furthest undercut out towards the tips of each piece being cut. I use this any I know I can't undercut deep enough and I wouldn't be able to get through piece fastest enough to make it land flat. This is the situation that I use this cut in and it never has failed me.
@geothr33
@geothr33 Ай бұрын
I'm having trouble visualizing what you're describing but it sounds pretty interesting. Would you make a video on it?
@richardf9137
@richardf9137 Ай бұрын
In my experience I’ve not had a saw catch by cutting behind the initial kerf cut! 71 and still climbing.
@richardbadish6990
@richardbadish6990 Ай бұрын
Cutting behind, you mean Cutting in front of your original cut? If Cutting behind Aka closer to the tree for your top cut. It can't get stuck because it's on the stationary side. Vs in front of, u are Cutting on the moving limb. Which unless you can get the saw out as it starts to pop u might be ok. However, pulling the saw out too soon. Is when it's got more potential to barber chair, or not break away cleanly. And causing it to swing down. Vs dropping flat! I'm not questioning your knowledge, ijs. By the way you wrote your comment. You made it sound like you don't get ur saw stuck because u cut behind your first cut. Which makes me think you misspoke on behind vs in front of. Or I'm not understanding what you mean. Because if u cut behind your bottom cut on top. That's leaving a lip for the tree branch to catch on. Causing it to swing a tad bit. If it's got a slight angle to the lead, it won't swing much. But if it's at a 90 angle, it's got more potential to swing on the lip. Especially if it's more than ¾ of an inch. I personally like Cutting the sides of the branch just in past the cambium layer. To eliminate any hinging or tearing that may grab your lanyard and or give you a not ideal outcome. But props to ya for still Cutting trees especially if u still climb! That's insane bro!
@richardf9137
@richardf9137 Ай бұрын
@@richardbadish6990 OK let me see if I can explain this. I cut the bottom curf about a third of the way through the branch , If you were to draw a line straight up, I would be cutting a half inch (behind it )towards the tree so it drops down into the bottom curf as I’m cutting and pops, I hope that better explains it.
SNAP CUT tutorial for arborists
11:00
Climbing Arborist
Рет қаралды 178 М.
PINK STEERING STEERING CAR
00:31
Levsob
Рет қаралды 18 МЛН
小女孩把路人当成离世的妈妈,太感人了.#short #angel #clown
00:53
В ДЕТСТВЕ СТРОИШЬ ДОМ ПОД СТОЛОМ
00:17
SIDELNIKOVVV
Рет қаралды 3,8 МЛН
Canopy Anchors | Craig Bachman | TCI Expo 2021 | The Tree Care Industry Association
26:00
Tree Care Industry Association
Рет қаралды 58 М.
REMOVE A TREE TWICE AS FAST USING THIS - SHANE'S TREES
2:38
Shane's Trees
Рет қаралды 92 М.
CUTTING HOLLOW TREES
7:33
Top Branch
Рет қаралды 49 М.
HOW TO CUT DOWN DEAD AND HAZARDOUS TREES | Tree Felling Tutorial
12:04
Spar removal basics | SRT tree climbing tutorial | Arborist How-to
13:53
DANGEROUS TREES! Severe Lean, How to fell a tree with hard lean
4:16
Into The Woods
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
Professional Arborist FAILS of 2022
7:03
Really Tall Tree Guy
Рет қаралды 1,3 МЛН