Tractors and wood! Show your pics

   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,281  
Here is my contribution. A picture of my wood shed I made myself a few years ago and my tractor with a bucket load of firewood. Typically I use my Ranger for firewood duties unless I need to move the tree.
 

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   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,282  
Here is my contribution. A picture of my wood shed I made myself a few years ago and my tractor with a bucket load of firewood. Typically I use my Ranger for firewood duties unless I need to move the tree.

Very nice job on that wood shed (y) (y) Looks straight, solid, a nice size, and airy.

gg
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,284  
Yesterday I started cutting fir, my annual winter TSI project. We have an area with some bigger trees ( for my wood lot here in the east, anyway ). They are recently dead or dying. Since there is more light on the ground now I want to them cut before any new regen starts in fear that they will fall on new growth when they blow over later if not cut. I will consider any logs I get out of it a bonus. Since it was the first day I took the camera.

Before I got down there I came across a blow down laying across a fork in the trail.


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I took care of it with the grapple. Then as I continued I saw a partridge giving me the evil as I drove past. The first tree was about 2' at the butt and dead. I thought I could put it through an opening that only had one small maple branch across it.


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But of course it hung up on that little branch.


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I had to work to get it down.


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The butt was all rotten and there was a weevil crook 12' up.


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Even with that I got a 40' log. I cut a cookie and cut that into a block just to insure my self that I had good wood from such a rotted tree.


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Here is video of the above in case you enjoy watching an old guy having fun in the woods.



gg
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,285  
My nephew and me, put in another day splitting for my customer friend and moving firewood for him, just over 4 cords total. The guy even had some huge oak crotches he said I could have if I wanted them, so we put the Husky 562 to work cutting them down a bit,

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After moving 13 heaped baskets of splits about a half mile to the "big house", we loaded my nephew's trailer with two oak logs, and then I loaded my tractor on my trailer,

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I put the final log in front of my tractor, to haul it home too,

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Overall, it was a pretty nice day, and I ended up with three nice oak logs to cut/split for my own use.

SR
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,287  
^^^^ Looks like a nice bucket of oak. Those versatile 22 ton splitters have worked up an awful lot of firewood over the years.

gg
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,288  
20241023_181214.JPG20241023_181224.JPGI ended up with about 10 truck loads of wood from storms this summer from a neighbor right down the road. Alot of damage from this past summer is yet to be cleaned up wood still all over.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,289  
Had a kickback event with my top handle saw, yesterday. Ate my Deere ball cap, and just scratched my scalp. I was relatively lucky.

You always hear folks say they can’t imagine how this happens, until it happens to them, and I guess I’m in that boat now. I put more hours on chainsaws every year, than most non-pros will in a lifetime, so this didn’t come from lack of experience. More likely a “familiarity breeds complacency” issue, in this case.

IMG_4050.jpeg

For anyone curious, “Little’s” is our local chain of JD dealerships.

Here’s where all the keyboard Dudly Do-Rights get on their soap box, about using a top-handle saw on the ground. :p
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,290  
Had a kickback event with my top handle saw, yesterday. Ate my Deere ball cap, and just scratched my scalp. I was relatively lucky.

You always hear folks say they can’t imagine how this happens, until it happens to them, and I guess I’m in that boat now. I put more hours on chainsaws every year, than most non-pros will in a lifetime, so this didn’t come from lack of experience. More likely a “familiarity breeds complacency” issue, in this case.

View attachment 1786650

For anyone curious, “Little’s” is our local chain of JD dealerships.

Here’s where all the keyboard Dudly Do-Rights get on their soap box, about using a top-handle saw on the ground. :p
The very first time I used my top handle saw it kicked back right at my face. Didn't hit me but got my attention for sure. What makes it worse is that they are light enough to one-hand so easily...
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,291  
The very first time I used my top handle saw it kicked back right at my face. Didn't hit me but got my attention for sure.
Glad you were okay.

What makes it worse is that they are light enough to one-hand so easily...
Yep, and that's what I'm often doing with mine, either using it to mark off a log for bucking with a measuring stick in my left hand and saw in my right, or using it to buck lengths off branches too skinny to bother with a real saw.

In this case, I was holding a small 3"-4" diameter branch in my left and bucking lengths off it with the top handle in my right. Poor form on my part, but always fine, until you get careless and let the tip contact something. In 15+ years of using a top handle, for countless hundreds of cords of firewood, this was the first time I managed to do exactly that.

And thus is today's lesson in single-point-of-failure maneuvers. No margin for error.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,292  
Glad you were okay.


Yep, and that's what I'm often doing with mine, either using it to mark off a log for bucking with a measuring stick in my left hand and saw in my right, or using it to buck lengths off branches too skinny to bother with a real saw.

In this case, I was holding a small 3"-4" diameter branch in my left and bucking lengths off it with the top handle in my right. Poor form on my part, but always fine, until you get careless and let the tip contact something. In 15+ years of using a top handle, for countless hundreds of cords of firewood, this was the first time I managed to do exactly that.

And thus is today's lesson in single-point-of-failure maneuvers. No margin for error.
I try to make sure I'm standing on the left and holding the saw out to the right when one-handing. Better not to do it at all, but.....
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,293  
The above reminds me of doing firewood with my family years ago. My father and I were running saws, mother and brother were feeding us wood. They'd hold a 2 foot piece of wood out and expect me to cut it, because that's what they were used to. I made them put it on the ground.

I've known pros with years of experience get bit or worse because they got complacent or tired. A power saw is likely the most dangerous tool that most people use.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,294  
Glad you're OK Mr. Winterdeere. That was verrry close to going wobbly. Something like that will give one religion.

I've always worn muffs and eye protection. Finally promised my wife I'd add wearing the chaps and gloves that were folded up in my cutting bag.

Still only occasionally wear head protection, mostly for very dead standing trees.

They say wisdom is learning from other people's mistakes. Might need to change my protocol...it all feels kind of sissy, till it isn't.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,295  
Had a kickback event with my top handle saw, yesterday. Ate my Deere ball cap, and just scratched my scalp. I was relatively lucky.

You always hear folks say they can’t imagine how this happens, until it happens to them, and I guess I’m in that boat now. I put more hours on chainsaws every year, than most non-pros will in a lifetime, so this didn’t come from lack of experience. More likely a “familiarity breeds complacency” issue, in this case.

View attachment 1786650

For anyone curious, “Little’s” is our local chain of JD dealerships.

Here’s where all the keyboard Dudly Do-Rights get on their soap box, about using a top-handle saw on the ground. :p
It certainly can happens quick glad you got away with only a scratch...It can happen to the best of us regardless of the chainsaw... thanks for sharing it take some guts!
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,296  
Still only occasionally wear head protection, mostly for very dead standing trees.
I'm the same. I wear a helmet whenever felling, or maybe even when limbing stuff that's hanging overhead, but never when bucking a log on the ground.

Stihl published stat's many years ago, maybe they've even been updated since, but memory tells me something like 5 out of every 6 chainsaw injuries could have been prevented by chaps, rather than a helmet. That said, I only wear my chaps when it's cold out, and it wasn't cold yesterday. :D

I know exactly what caused yesterday's mishap, and it was totally my fault, no debating that. But I am bothered by the fact that the inertial chain brake on this crappy Husqvarna 435T never activated. I already preferred Stihl over Husqvarna, and now I have just one more reason for that sentiment. Even without my left wrist hitting the chain brake lever, I'm led to believe the inertial component of the brake should have activated in this scenario.

I remember the first time I broke my arm at age 8, and an arborist hopped into the emergency room on one foot, with his buddy carrying the guy's other foot in an Igloo Lunchmate cooler. Even the pro's screw up, sometimes.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,297  
I'm the same. I wear a helmet whenever felling, or maybe even when limbing stuff that's hanging overhead, but never when bucking a log on the ground.

Stihl published stat's many years ago, maybe they've even been updated since, but memory tells me something like 5 out of every 6 chainsaw injuries could have been prevented by chaps, rather than a helmet. That said, I only wear my chaps when it's cold out, and it wasn't cold yesterday. :D

I know exactly what caused yesterday's mishap, and it was totally my fault, no debating that. But I am bothered by the fact that the inertial chain brake on this crappy Husqvarna 435T never activated. I already preferred Stihl over Husqvarna, and now I have just one more reason for that sentiment. Even without my left wrist hitting the chain brake lever, I'm led to believe the inertial component of the brake should have activated in this scenario.

I remember the first time I broke my arm at age 8, and an arborist hopped into the emergency room on one foot, with his buddy carrying the guy's other foot in an Igloo Lunchmate cooler. Even the pro's screw up, sometimes.
Perhaps some adjustment can be done to make the chain break singly more sensitive to engage ? some models offer that options not sure about yours but could be worth looking into it.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,299  
Don't be like me - started wearing hearing protection after I was deaf.

gg
Just did a quick search on "Kevlar athletic cup". Zero hits. :ROFLMAO:

I also waited until I failed a hearing test, to start wearing ear protection. Thankfully I was only 14 years old, and nearly all of the damage healed. The doc told me at the time, that if I'd been an adult, the damage would have been permanent.
 
   / Tractors and wood! Show your pics #24,300  
^^^^ Looks like a nice bucket of oak. Those versatile 22 ton splitters have worked up an awful lot of firewood over the years.

gg

It is a workhorse, especially for the price! My former brother in law and I take turns with it, he paid like $400 for it a few years ago and he uses it in the spring, I use it in the fall.
 

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