Richard
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 4,980
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
Another thought and a twist on using the tractor... go rent an industrial type loader/backhoe.
I've dropped a bunch of trees using Brutus. Primarily pine trees up to around 24" diamater and a handful of oaks. Small diamater pine trees, I simply pushed over without bothering using chain saw.
Drive up to offending tree, plant stablilizers, raise backhoe bucket and gently place ONTO tree at hmmm... 10 foot high level with hoe near machine (not extended). Get off machine, go to tree, make first cuts and take out your notch. Start to make your final cut but you can make it a shallow cut (this is how I did it anyway). I usually leave a larger hinge and DON'T want the tree to necessarily fall yet... then, kill saw, get back into backhoe and "flex" the backhoe straight out and push tree over.
I've even helped direct the side to side direction of a fall by using some side action of the hoe. The tree I was pushing over, yet another dead pine, was going to fall directly onto another tree I hoped to save, so as I was forcing this tree down, I also applied some sideways force to it and was able to coax the tree to angle more to it's left and fell away from the tree I was hoping to save.
I know this is probably going to be viewed as a dangerous way to drop a tree, but my way of thinking is, by doing it this way, I have more horsepower available to me and I have some steel between myself and the tree.
When the offending tree is down, you can use the loader to help clean up the mess. If you have somewhere you can burn tree, you can drag the entire tree, or cut it into 3 or 4 sections, rather than cutting entire tree to bits and handeling a LOT more parts.
Since I'm on a farm, I just drag/push the entire tree (traction allowing) and am done with it.
Richard
I've dropped a bunch of trees using Brutus. Primarily pine trees up to around 24" diamater and a handful of oaks. Small diamater pine trees, I simply pushed over without bothering using chain saw.
Drive up to offending tree, plant stablilizers, raise backhoe bucket and gently place ONTO tree at hmmm... 10 foot high level with hoe near machine (not extended). Get off machine, go to tree, make first cuts and take out your notch. Start to make your final cut but you can make it a shallow cut (this is how I did it anyway). I usually leave a larger hinge and DON'T want the tree to necessarily fall yet... then, kill saw, get back into backhoe and "flex" the backhoe straight out and push tree over.
I've even helped direct the side to side direction of a fall by using some side action of the hoe. The tree I was pushing over, yet another dead pine, was going to fall directly onto another tree I hoped to save, so as I was forcing this tree down, I also applied some sideways force to it and was able to coax the tree to angle more to it's left and fell away from the tree I was hoping to save.
I know this is probably going to be viewed as a dangerous way to drop a tree, but my way of thinking is, by doing it this way, I have more horsepower available to me and I have some steel between myself and the tree.
When the offending tree is down, you can use the loader to help clean up the mess. If you have somewhere you can burn tree, you can drag the entire tree, or cut it into 3 or 4 sections, rather than cutting entire tree to bits and handeling a LOT more parts.
Since I'm on a farm, I just drag/push the entire tree (traction allowing) and am done with it.
Richard