skidding a REALLY big log

   / skidding a REALLY big log
  • Thread Starter
#21  
It's funny, but even with your description and dimensions, it did not dawn on me how big that tree is until I saw you (I'm guessing it's you) standing beside it. That tree is huge and you did some nice work to move it in a controlled and safe manner. Nice job!

Thx, Jim. Yeah, that's me....the only photo of me on the internet...ever. I
used it for scale, as you see. I try to keep my ugly mug as anonymous
as possible.

As for safety, I am not a daredevil....indeed I think of myself as somewhat
of a chicken. But...a carefull analysis of the forces involved, plus a bit of
common sense, and many big tasks are doable safely. IF you have the
right equipment. I do NOT cut these big trees down myself.

I used a 100-ft cable and a 50-ft cable along with my homemade snatch
block and some chain. This allows me to be well away from danger.
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log #22  
dfkrug
Nice job getting it cut, and moved off your road. Obvious you knew what you were doing, and went about it in a controlled way. Don't need to be afraid of such things, as long as you have the experience and knowledge to release it and let it move where you want it to go. :)
Looks like the quality isn't very high, due to the large limbs that were trimmed off. May appear that there is some butt rot as well. Did you find any when bucking the stump off (if you did that yet)?
What length log is possible to get out of this butt cut?
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log
  • Thread Starter
#23  
Looks like the quality isn't very high, due to the large limbs that were trimmed off. May appear that there is some butt rot as well. Did you find any when bucking the stump off (if you did that yet)?
What length log is possible to get out of this butt cut?

There is a good 40-ft of straight trunk on this log. If it were milled, it would
have to be cut at least in half because it would have to be skidded down the
road to a work area or loading area. That's about 300-400ft away and
down a 13-15% grade. The road in that section (only used by my 2
neighbors) is in poor shape. The section I use, plus parking areas, is all
paved with asphalt and in excellent shape. I think that log will be there
for years, esp since it will take a 36" chainsaw to do some of the cuts. It
is up to the neighbors if they want to remove it.

DF trees have no tap roots, and this one had a bad uphill root. The rest of
the tree's insides look good. It had a few mushrooms on the sides, which
is an indicator I look for to know if you have a problem tree (inside rot).
Maybe more TBN folks know about looking for "toadstools" on the sides
of DF trees.
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log #24  
If milling remains an option, I am thinking that a swingsaw mill could accomplish the task with minimal movement of the log,no lifting or skidding. Lucas Swingsaw is one of the brands. Here's a youtube on a homemade swingsaw in action. YouTube - Homemade swingmill sawmill
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log #25  
Nice work, big tree, I'm thinking I would've moved, not the tree, but the family :)

I don't see trees that big around here.

Thanks for the before and after photos.

Joel
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log #26  
Shame it is not going to be milled, hard to find decent logs like that. The loggers around here are scalping everything taking tiny trees 8" diameter. This is why the lumber at lowes home depot and such is crap, bad harvesting pratices. Seems like a logger in the area would have no problem taking that from your neighbor?
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log
  • Thread Starter
#27  
Seems like a logger in the area would have no problem taking that from your neighbor?

I don't how it works back East, but here in CA anyone who brings logs to
a mill has to show them that it came from land that had a Timber Harvest
Permit, which comes from the the CDF (CA Dept of Forestry). To get a
THP, you have to hire a licensed Forester. Only DF and redwood have
value to a logger, and you have to have at least a few truckloads of trees
to make it at all worthwhile for a logger to do the work. Unless you have
many truckloads of trees, the landowner won't get paid anything. My
18 DF trees in 1996 sold for about $30K at the mill, and that was enough
for a crew of 3 to rent their equipment and do the work for the trees.

There is a huge unintended consequence to the extreme difficulty of
getting a permit and finding a logger willing to do the work: we have many
rural areas that have unmanaged forests that have become fire hazards.

My 19 acres was fully logged 100+ years ago, but now has many trees
that are over 100 ft tall.

This photo is my biggest redwood stump from over 100 years ago. It was
cut at about 10ft off the ground and must have been over 200 feet tall. In
another 200-300 years, maybe it will rot away.
 

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   / skidding a REALLY big log #28  
I don't how it works back East, but here in CA anyone who brings logs to
a mill has to show them that it came from land that had a Timber Harvest
Permit, which comes from the the CDF (CA Dept of Forestry). To get a
THP, you have to hire a licensed Forester.


WOW, no wonder our country is in such bad shape.
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log #29  
WOW, no wonder our country is in such bad shape.

It is true, it can be a PITA, but without those controls, we would, and did, say, WOW, look at the barren hillsides washing down to subsoil. The problem is to find a happy medium, and as long as there are people in the business for short term gain only, it's hard to find and keep that sensible common ground.

Regulations pile up on themselves because there is always somebody who follows the exact letter of a simple rule but manages to violate the spirit of the reason the reg was made in the first place. So, more detail and sub-clauses follow. It's a vicious circle once started. In many ways, blaming the state forestry management people is shooting the messenger. Why not get mad at the folks who created the problem to begin with?

I have slope sides on my lot that have no topsoil. This area was clear cut and used for sheep and cattle pasture from the mid-1800's until about 70 years ago. It's been logged over at least twice since then. It can take a long time for a forest floor to recover.

Dave.
 
   / skidding a REALLY big log
  • Thread Starter
#30  
It is true, it can be a PITA, but without those controls, we would, and did, say, WOW, look at the barren hillsides washing down to subsoil.

I certainly want to see SOME regulation of the lumber industry. I have
seen close-up the devastation left behind by logging....AND by forest fires.

Unfortunately, regulation of logging impacts those who just want to
protect their homesteads from wildfires.
 

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