Cowboy Billy
New member
Even a green growing tree can be rotten. It would be best to read as much as you can. Watch a bunch a Utube videos especially the ones showing felling gone wrong. As knowing what not to do is as important as knowing what to do. Then find someone that knows what they are doing to teach you. As there is a lot to learn and watch out for and it takes time to sink in. Part of the studying is also to see if your experienced person really knows what he is doing. I have cut with several people that claimed they have been cutting for years and claimed they "Knew All There Was about it" That left me shacking my head and leaving.
Two tips. After felling look up at the trees around the one you dropped for broken branches hanging up in them. I have had big branches fall out 20 minutes after dropping that were big enough to really hurt me if they had hit me.
Sometimes it can be really hard to tell the lean and weight balance on a tree. Take a stick get some fishing line and a sinker tie it to the end of the stick. Hold it up infront of you looking at the tree. After it stops swaying hold it so the string is between you and the center of the bottom of the tree. Then look up the tree and you can see the lean of the tree and take a guess how much weight of branches are on each side. Do that from two directions 90 deg apart.
The biggest danger with pushing over trees is 1/ having it break and fall on you. I have had trees break in 3-4 pieces and fall any which way. 2/ broken branches hanging up in tree tops and falling out later. 3/ the tree you are pushing or felling hitting a dead tree and that one falling back at you. 4/ the bucket of the tractor you are pushing with riding up the tree and to one side or the other and tipping the tractor. I haven't had much of a problem with the root balls tipping the tractor its more of a case of the roots coming up and into the hoses or radiator and damaging the tractor.
I have pushed over several hundred trees making trails, roads and building sites on my 120 acres with dozers and loaders. And its just plain stupid to push on them without a full overhead ROPS.
In this one I was pushing in heavy woods and the roots pushed out before they they pushed over. I tried to back out but they hit a third one over and I had to go get a chainsaw and cut my self out.
Billy
Two tips. After felling look up at the trees around the one you dropped for broken branches hanging up in them. I have had big branches fall out 20 minutes after dropping that were big enough to really hurt me if they had hit me.
Sometimes it can be really hard to tell the lean and weight balance on a tree. Take a stick get some fishing line and a sinker tie it to the end of the stick. Hold it up infront of you looking at the tree. After it stops swaying hold it so the string is between you and the center of the bottom of the tree. Then look up the tree and you can see the lean of the tree and take a guess how much weight of branches are on each side. Do that from two directions 90 deg apart.
The biggest danger with pushing over trees is 1/ having it break and fall on you. I have had trees break in 3-4 pieces and fall any which way. 2/ broken branches hanging up in tree tops and falling out later. 3/ the tree you are pushing or felling hitting a dead tree and that one falling back at you. 4/ the bucket of the tractor you are pushing with riding up the tree and to one side or the other and tipping the tractor. I haven't had much of a problem with the root balls tipping the tractor its more of a case of the roots coming up and into the hoses or radiator and damaging the tractor.
I have pushed over several hundred trees making trails, roads and building sites on my 120 acres with dozers and loaders. And its just plain stupid to push on them without a full overhead ROPS.

In this one I was pushing in heavy woods and the roots pushed out before they they pushed over. I tried to back out but they hit a third one over and I had to go get a chainsaw and cut my self out.

Billy