you two work really well together. You're reading his body language and he knows what to expect from you. That's pretty rare. It's a win-win. You have good people and they get to continue to live and keep all their digits. I would imagine losing a finger in a pipe joint wouldn't be that difficult. Cheers from Louisiana.
Chris, Please tell Timmy to always back away from the tree when it starts to fall, and not walk by the base/stump as its falling. If there is no hinge that thing could shoot backwards and crush him. I know that you know all this stuff and your helping to train Tim, I just couldn't bare to see him get hurt. Beautiful job as always, and thanks for the video!!
I had the same thought. He walked right behind the stump as it was going down, and it could so easily have ended badly. If you watch chainsaw logging channels, they always get out of the way when the trees are falling. They might have done it for nothing 99 times out of a 100, but that 1% could kill you.
I cringed at that, his removal of his helmet & both Tim & Chris' lack of eye & hearing protection. I ran a saw for many years & still have some hearing loss, despite wearing hearing protection, though that might be down to too many rock concerts & too much pheasant shooting...
Maybe mention to them they might want to install some protection around that hydrant now that people can easily hit it with a trailer/truck. We do ours with simple 4X4s painted bright yellow with reflectors on the corners.
A trick I use to determine where a tree will reach to when it falls, is stand back quite aways get a stick or long twig hold it up to the tree, break it off so its the same length of the tree as seen from where you are, then keeping the bottom of the stick flush with the bottom of the tree tilt it over till it's horizontal to the ground. The top of the stick will tell you where the top of the tree will end up. Believe me it works.
I have been watching your videos for a long time now and, man do do awesome work. I Like how you care about your reputation by cleaning really good, not many people understand that. It make your customers feel good and makes you feel good by doing the right thing.
Chris is a great operator. So good on this video, he was running the mini like it was rented. Thought he had sped up the video. Wow! Awesome catch on the tree. I was thinking, if he can catch it. Bam! Done!
As a fellow equipment operator been watching your work you are very good at what you do and learn alot of trick's of the trade from you keep up the good work!!
People dont see it but I loved the days I got to do Chris's job. Running is so much easier on your body then what Tim has to do. Standing on your feet all day, bending, cutting with the saw, in and out of ditches. It's a lot harder doing 10 hours on your feet following a machine.
Amazing dude. You guys get a lot done for small crew. Impressive! And then you do videos. You must sleep like a dead person when you finally stop. Great operating as always. Some day i should strap a camera to our jobs. Just never make it happen. We do quality work like you guys. Thats why i love watching.
It's funny you should say that about sleeping, because Tim always looks like he is half asleep lately. For such a young lad, he sure doesn't suffer from an energy overload.
Oh Yes !! Killer Catch Chris... Yep, The Man with the Plan !!! lololol... That was pretty Slick catching that tree, yep , got bragging rights on that one for awhile lololol... Have a Great Evening Bro......
All I can think is it won’t be long before the 7 figure home that now has a lovely 5 vehicle parking lot right next to it will soon have an 8 foot privacy fence going up. 😱
mccrossins forestry what about the chainsaw personal , protection, equipment (P.P.E.) many Americans don’t seem to use it , especially the trousers (Pants) when using a chainsaw , could save loosing a leg . I often wonder how a hard hat would save you if a tree trunk fell on your head ? 🤔flat as a 🥞😆😆😆🇬🇧
Chris Snelling your right on the saw pants I seen a video where a guy purposely cut into a pair to show what would happen and as soon as the saw cut into them the fibers wound into the saw and killed it there's like 20 layers to save your legs
Check out Justin's latest upload. He devotes fully half of it to how he keeps his saw sharp. Whoops, last but one upload. The lad has gone from hardly putting up anything, to a video everyday. Chris' followers should support Justin. I've been trying to persuade him to tell a few growing up with Chris type stories. th-cam.com/video/kuIo7Kil72s/w-d-xo.html
Great safety video! Using a chain saw in short pants and your safety glasses sitting up on the brim of your hat. Lol! Hope the state insurance guys don't follow u tube!🤫
Jason King Oh ok. Good deal. I picked up this used 450 Case. Ordered rails, pads, sprockets, axle seals, and everything to repack the cylinders. Going to start on it tomorrow! Looking forward to it. Haven’t been on a dozer much since I was a kid back on the farm.
Hi Chris, just a question re soil type. you always seem to be on that red sand / clay. How far out in the county does that extend to, what does it change to?
Chris, Please do us all a favor and when you have the Go-Pro in your hand explaining your job...SLOW IT DOWN!..Very important..Plus- the finished job......(almost puked)..lol Thanks..watch and like on a regular basis...your a good man..:)
@J/C Chris is actually a lot better than most YT presenters regarding hose-piping the camera. I think he does it all hand held without a gimbal, which is impressive. I suspect Chris would be sick of reading comparisons with Andrew Camarata, but it is fair to say that Andrew is a master at this stuff, and keeps up to date with the equipment he uses making for smooth photography. On the other hand, Mike (Dirt Perfect) uses lots of decent equipment to film his channel, but still makes a hash of it. facebook.com/dirtperfect/photos/a.317914602187853/372093056770007/?type=3&theater
hope a big ol fire truck tanker does not come down there and back over that pipe ! when he gets a full load of water , he may crush it. I can almost see it , he drives to the lake and backs toward the cottage , fills up and clunk , there he sits
Hi there, Question, The trucks you use seem to have many axles two of which are "Lazy axles " as we know them in New Zealand, In the many videos I have watched from your site I have never seen the trucks running on them regardless of the load they are carrying, are these fitted to meet DOT regulations??
More than likely the axles are down when they are transporting on the highways and we just don't see them? Not sure if they raise the "dead axles" when they get on the job to save wear and tear, or not. Then again, they just might not be loading them heavy enough to use the 3rd and 4th axles?
Julian, they have all of the health and safety stuff the E.U. could ever want ;) Here in the U.S. we do have OSHA and also state level safety people mainly involved in major projects and occasional random checks. With small projects you're unlikely to ever see anyone. The people a building company needs to care about are the insurance company he hires to provide liability insurance and accident safety insurance, those people check your history for accidents and problems before they agree to cover you.
@@davidnull5590 Hey David , just having a laugh! But being an English guy living in S Germany the last ten years! The health and safety is none existent here,Toe tectors is all it seems!! Back home on the building industry Mandatory is Hi Vis,Hard Hat, Toe tectors Harness for roof work! which is damn nearly impossible creeping round a new roof! and when you not using 110 Volt transformed down from 240 you instant F,,,, off home ! With constant meetings and courses for heath and safety this and that, with regular spot checks from them that must be obeyed ;-)
A hard hat isn't going to do anything to stop a tree, but chaps will do wonders against the kickback of or tripping while running a chain saw vs bare legged shorts. Makes me cringe to think about it.
Life is always better at the Lake !!! Like to see part 2
Wish I was cool with all the tools... what a garden I could make!!!
That’s right call the path of less damage and very nice catch on the tree yup that’s skill 👍 10:58 2:45pm NY 😎🇺🇸
you two work really well together. You're reading his body language and he knows what to expect from you. That's pretty rare. It's a win-win. You have good people and they get to continue to live and keep all their digits. I would imagine losing a finger in a pipe joint wouldn't be that difficult.
Cheers from Louisiana.
Amazing the amount of work the group does in one day.
I would enjoy seeing a simultaneous shot of your hands working the controls! You are very precise!
Just say "Action!" to get a starting point for the finished video so it's much easier to synch the 2 or more views.
Nice to see those two working as one. No useless words, each one knowing what and when to do it. Cool team, guys.
Chris, Please tell Timmy to always back away from the tree when it starts to fall, and not walk by the base/stump as its falling. If there is no hinge that thing could shoot backwards and crush him. I know that you know all this stuff and your helping to train Tim, I just couldn't bare to see him get hurt. Beautiful job as always, and thanks for the video!!
Your assuming Timmie can't read?😜
I had the same thought. He walked right behind the stump as it was going down, and it could so easily have ended badly. If you watch chainsaw logging channels, they always get out of the way when the trees are falling. They might have done it for nothing 99 times out of a 100, but that 1% could kill you.
I cringed at that, his removal of his helmet & both Tim & Chris' lack of eye & hearing protection.
I ran a saw for many years & still have some hearing loss, despite wearing hearing protection, though that might be down to too many rock concerts & too much pheasant shooting...
Thanks for the video. It looks like a nice environment to work in....a day when it's fun to go to work.
I like the way you and Tim work together like a team. You have trained him well.
Maybe mention to them they might want to install some protection around that hydrant now that people can easily hit it with a trailer/truck. We do ours with simple 4X4s painted bright yellow with reflectors on the corners.
A trick I use to determine where a tree will reach to when it falls, is stand back quite aways get a stick or long twig hold it up to the tree, break it off so its the same length of the tree as seen from where you are, then keeping the bottom of the stick flush with the bottom of the tree tilt it over till it's horizontal to the ground. The top of the stick will tell you where the top of the tree will end up. Believe me it works.
Nice catch and great job.! You guys get a lot of work done . Love the camera angles !
didn't think i see you comment in letsdig18 channels
Way to go Chris great catch
Nice catch with the tree , pure skillage :)
Great job Chris . Thanks for the video 👍🇬🇧
Great video Chris thanks for sharing have a great day and stay safe out there
The path of less destruction. I like that call Chris. Great job..
I have been watching your videos for a long time now and, man do do awesome work. I Like how you care about your reputation by cleaning really good, not many people understand that. It make your customers feel good and makes you feel good by doing the right thing.
10:00 I bet that house next to the boat launch is thrilled about the beer drinking spot/parking lot going in, lol
Sucks to be them. Shouldn't have bought a place near a common area like a road leading to a boat launch if they don't like people coming and going.
It's a rental house haha
Chris...@ 8:53 YOU DA MAN! Who can catch a tree like that??? ROCK ON!
Looking good Chris enjoyed watching thank you for sharing
Chris is a great operator. So good on this video, he was running the mini like it was rented. Thought he had sped up the video. Wow! Awesome catch on the tree. I was thinking, if he can catch it. Bam! Done!
At 2:58 I thought you would have picked up Timmy's hardhat with the thumb and put it back on his head! LOL! Nice vid, Thanks, Chris!
As a fellow equipment operator been watching your work you are very good at what you do and learn alot of trick's of the trade from you keep up the good work!!
Great job enjoyed that!!!! Will have to start calling you skills from now own great work!!!
“Caught a tree in mid-air”. Had to watch that twice. Good job.....
I hate when people quote a phrase and don't write the timestamp
8:45 ish
Nus life’s a bitch 😆😆
Yes sir, Chris. You do have skills! Respect!
People dont see it but I loved the days I got to do Chris's job. Running is so much easier on your body then what Tim has to do. Standing on your feet all day, bending, cutting with the saw, in and out of ditches. It's a lot harder doing 10 hours on your feet following a machine.
@2:17 admiring your safety gear!!!
Thank you for putting the camera in front of you, I can see better now. Keep up the good work.
Nice straight pole logs too ! Would be great for my firewood processor !!!
Looks like a cool spot to hang out by the lake now that there will be somewhere safe to park. Enjoyed the video bro
Nice job cool project 👍
Great work guys! Y’all have a good-un!
New slogan for tee shirts “ Life is Better with a Yanmar mini !”
Great start to an interesting job!
Looks like a nice new project Chris 👍😎👌
Amazing dude. You guys get a lot done for small crew. Impressive! And then you do videos. You must sleep like a dead person when you finally stop. Great operating as always. Some day i should strap a camera to our jobs. Just never make it happen. We do quality work like you guys. Thats why i love watching.
It's funny you should say that about sleeping, because Tim always looks like he is half asleep lately. For such a young lad, he sure doesn't suffer from an energy overload.
@@TrevorDennis100
I just figured it was because he's paid by the hour! 😊
That Chain saw work this time of year you just sweat down Thur your draws , it’s tough and saw dust sticking to your sweaty body go Tim
Grate video Chris love the camera angle
Wow. That's some real skills. Have an awesome week, Andreas from Off Grid Sweden 🇸🇪
Good job catching the tree, Damm what a save!
Chris, you and Tim have been doing this too long. All I can say is a WOW, nice work!
Give your dry 'trunk' and give it a good shake, you lose 80% of loose/dry dirt!
Fantastic catch 🎖🏆
Hey Chris class job as always but would you ever think of putting a quick hitch on the 160 for jobs like that to save bringing 2 machines out on a job
Oh boy safety police will be along soon.
You guys do great work
Oh Yes !! Killer Catch Chris... Yep, The Man with the Plan !!! lololol... That was pretty Slick catching that tree, yep , got bragging rights on that one for awhile lololol... Have a Great Evening Bro......
Nice catch you r the man got alot of work to do
Impressive mid-air catch there!
All I can think is it won’t be long before the 7 figure home that now has a lovely 5 vehicle parking lot right next to it will soon have an 8 foot privacy fence going up. 😱
I would that's for sure !
letsdig18
15 minutes ago
It's a rental house haha
Nice work as usual 😊
NICE catch Chris 😎👍👍👍
When you’re good, you’re good👍
You been doing it for so long it's just second nature the way your able to control the trees when you lay them down
You make running those machines look so easy. I cant wait until the excavating company I work for sticks me in an excavator
You should have picked up Tim's hardhat and put it on his head with the excavator
I would have paid to see that !
@@delcasaleexcavating9508 Chris is smooth on the controls he could do it. I have seen some amazing feats with large equipment
@@alfadoofus I agree with you Chris totally
Just would have been funny to see that !!!
It would be good to wear a hard hat Safety First.🇺🇸
mccrossins forestry what about the chainsaw personal , protection, equipment (P.P.E.) many Americans don’t seem to use it , especially the trousers (Pants) when using a chainsaw , could save loosing a leg . I often wonder how a hard hat would save you if a tree trunk fell on your head ? 🤔flat as a 🥞😆😆😆🇬🇧
Chris Snelling your right on the saw pants I seen a video where a guy purposely cut into a pair to show what would happen and as soon as the saw cut into them the fibers wound into the saw and killed it there's like 20 layers to save your legs
Love your work
Unusual to see you digging in rocky soil, normally it's clay or sandy.
Another job well done
And by the way Chris you really are the man with the plan!!!
You are the Man Chris!
Not being negative but I think the teeth on the bucket is sharper then your chain saw...lol Jack
Check out Justin's latest upload. He devotes fully half of it to how he keeps his saw sharp. Whoops, last but one upload. The lad has gone from hardly putting up anything, to a video everyday. Chris' followers should support Justin. I've been trying to persuade him to tell a few growing up with Chris type stories. th-cam.com/video/kuIo7Kil72s/w-d-xo.html
Tim knows where the sharp chains are, Im not telling him everytime he needs to change it lol
Great safety video! Using a chain saw in short pants and your safety glasses sitting up on the brim of your hat. Lol! Hope the state insurance guys don't follow u tube!🤫
I just got a Case 450. Looking forward to making some content like this for my channel.
Rob are you in the boll weevil circle?
I am! Actually just off Rucker Blvd.
@@RobBeene very cool I'm originally from the dothan area over in Southwest Georgia.
Jason King Oh ok. Good deal. I picked up this used 450 Case. Ordered rails, pads, sprockets, axle seals, and everything to repack the cylinders. Going to start on it tomorrow! Looking forward to it. Haven’t been on a dozer much since I was a kid back on the farm.
@@RobBeene sounds like you have your work cut out for ya
Hi Chris, just a question re soil type. you always seem to be on that red sand / clay. How far out in the county does that extend to, what does it change to?
Awesome vid Chris!!
First and good video keep up the good work
Swing it down and grab it at the same time......Lmao......PRICELESS
Nice catch!!!!!
@letsdig18 do you run at full throttle on the excavator normally?
You work fast!
Very impressive grab ld18!
Like the video guy's keep doing it .
with all the woods around they are gonna play hell keeping the debris out of 120 feet of pipe.
Nice catch! You were digging like that thing owed you child support 😂 Great job as always!
Elite Earthworks LLC “ like it owed you child support”, now thats funny 😂😂👍
D C 🤣 he was digging angry
Elite Earthworks LLC 😂😂
you got your window fixed.
Call Logger Wade next time. LOL!!
Nice Catch!
Can you do a video on how you go about pricing a job?
brilliant catch lol bet u cant do it again
Can't wait to see the finished project. Did you throw Tim in the lake after??? LOL Great video!!!!
Chris, Please do us all a favor and when you have the Go-Pro in your hand explaining your job...SLOW IT DOWN!..Very important..Plus- the finished job......(almost puked)..lol
Thanks..watch and like on a regular basis...your a good man..:)
@J/C Chris is actually a lot better than most YT presenters regarding hose-piping the camera. I think he does it all hand held without a gimbal, which is impressive. I suspect Chris would be sick of reading comparisons with Andrew Camarata, but it is fair to say that Andrew is a master at this stuff, and keeps up to date with the equipment he uses making for smooth photography. On the other hand, Mike (Dirt Perfect) uses lots of decent equipment to film his channel, but still makes a hash of it. facebook.com/dirtperfect/photos/a.317914602187853/372093056770007/?type=3&theater
8:45 catch and release.. 🐟 🇬🇧
Can you please put the camera in the mini next time. It would be awesome to see that view.
What size bucket was that on the Yanmar?
Talk about turning a light switch on....just occurred to me that is what those little buckets are for
What's the word on that giant 30' deep rotted drain pipe job?
Chris where is the lake u are working at
hope a big ol fire truck tanker does not come down there and back over that pipe ! when he gets a full load of water , he may crush it. I can almost see it , he drives to the lake and backs toward the cottage , fills up and clunk , there he sits
wow!
pretty cool
You got a like and subscribe from me for that conifer catch!
Come on let's see the finished product. Don't leave me hanging.
Hi there, Question, The trucks you use seem to have many axles two of which are "Lazy axles " as we know them in New Zealand, In the many videos I have watched from your site I have never seen the trucks running on them regardless of the load they are carrying, are these fitted to meet DOT regulations??
More than likely the axles are down when they are transporting on the highways and we just don't see them? Not sure if they raise the "dead axles" when they get on the job to save wear and tear, or not. Then again, they just might not be loading them heavy enough to use the 3rd and 4th axles?
Some of the areas have weight restrictions, so they don't need the drag axles!
i like the back of your t shirt and how is it running an excavator ive never ran one before it looks like alot of fun
Nice!!!!
Red dirt territory. This must be the Piedmont region of NC.
Yo from Germany Everyone , Not much Health and safety there Tim Just throw your hard hat off! ;-)
Don't think he meant to, it looks like it fell off when he looked up ?
Julian, they have all of the health and safety stuff the E.U. could ever want ;) Here in the U.S. we do have OSHA and also state level safety people mainly involved in major projects and occasional random checks. With small projects you're unlikely to ever see anyone. The people a building company needs to care about are the insurance company he hires to provide liability insurance and accident safety insurance, those people check your history for accidents and problems before they agree to cover you.
@@davidnull5590 Hey David , just having a laugh! But being an English guy living in S Germany the last ten years! The health and safety is none existent here,Toe tectors is all it seems!!
Back home on the building industry Mandatory is Hi Vis,Hard Hat, Toe tectors Harness for roof work! which is damn nearly impossible creeping round a new roof! and when you not using 110 Volt transformed down from 240 you instant F,,,, off home !
With constant meetings and courses for heath and safety this and that, with regular spot checks from them that must be obeyed ;-)
A hard hat isn't going to do anything to stop a tree, but chaps will do wonders against the kickback of or tripping while running a chain saw vs bare legged shorts.
Makes me cringe to think about it.
JCGoogle it can still save you from a saw to the face in a kickback.