I followed the exact steps, but I waited until after a good rain to remove the roots. The ground was much softer and it made a big difference in the amount of energy needed.
One thing I definitely learned from watching this video was never under any circumstances plant houses near trees 😆 🤣 😂 that was a good one! but those were some serious roots 💪😉👍
In an age of instant gratification, it's important to appreciate slow, methodical, patient work like this. It's not always about doing something in a rush, as fast as possible, at any cost. Sometimes it's about one guy and some simple hand tools, experiencing a sense of accomplishment from chipping away at something, bit by bit, at last earning a long-awaited victory. Some life lessons in there....
Biggest lesson I learned was not planting houses next to trees. :) I would add that placing a hard board under the lever bar may prevent it from sinking into the soil and give you more leverage action. Great video!
Well done! Enjoyed watching the video and all of the spinal adjustments. 😅 In my experience, the reciprocating saw, a hatchet for the stubborn little ones (yes, you will dull it but you will sharpen it later) and the pry bar are key. I use a 60 inch pinch point pry bar that you can also use to break small roots. One tip that I find very effective: Cut some of those big roots from the surface like you did but then just -wait- a few weeks/months if possible for the root to die. For most trees, dead roots are very brittle, and they will come up easier, often just by breaking with the leverage of lifting one end. So if I were to tackle a project like that on my own yard I would get out there and do as many cuts as I could from the surface and then just focus on other projects and things for a few weeks if while I wait for the roots to die/dry out .
Brad, great tips on how to remove roots. I had a giant oak tree cut down to a sump last year. After a heavy rain dampen the soil, the reciprocal saw cut through the wood and soil with ease. Afterwards the pry bar can now lift the trunk and snap the roots underneath.
There are roots everywhere in my yard. Every planting project requires my reciprocating saw for root removal. I find saw blades with carbide tipped teeth are better than the pruning blades. Because you're sticking the blade in the ground, they hit rocks, etc. And this dulls a pruning blade quickly. The carbide blades are much more resilient. I've found myself unknowingly cutting through a rock.
After watching this, I went out and bought a saw with the diablo blade. Just removed some huge tree roots now and it worked a treat. Thanks from Australia!
next week we will hear that the tree fell on your house. Cut the tree down before you remove roots from the ground. The root you cut may save your life.
Brad, I love your positive attitude and your humor! You are a natural born teacher. Can’t wait to see more of your home improvement videos! Thank You for sharing this.
This video will be handy evidence for your neighbor after the very large tree (formerly held up by very large roots) crushes his house. Your insurance company will dump you without paying one dime. Not kidding. This is real. Consult a professional arborist before cutting roots.
@@ridermak4111 True but ONLY if tree failed shortly after surface roots removed. For this reason I’m giving notice to my town that if they decide not to remove their tree that’s destroying my driveway plus sidewalk & curb (all my responsibility to maintain by code), I will remove roots and THEY are on notice that a failure is on them. Importantly town planted tree 3’ from driveway tho code sez 10’ minimum.
@@gr8dvd WOW ! There’s a huge difference between concrete being damaged in slow motion, and innocent people being killed in an instant. But it sounds like you don’t much care about that difference. ….you’re responsible for the curb, too? Yeah, right. My sidewalk has been lifted by roots in two places, and lots of my neighbors have had the same problem. None of us has ever whined about it. I guess we like the shade.
I enjoyed the video - been there, done that - but I used another tool that I have - I have a 3000psi pressure washer - yep! I'm too old to be prying so one day I tried it. It's messy, but I found the water allows the dirt to loosen the ground. The 2nd day, I watered the area a lot. Then the roots + the reciprocating saw worked great. I also used the pressure washer for placing a 4x4 post for the mailbox. Easiest installation EVER.
Another youtuber used a grinder with a masonry grinding wheel to grind the roots down flat, to below lawn level, then grew grass over it. Your method is more thorough. With the price of the sawblade and the prying tool being less than my landscapers’s hourly rate, I’m going to try it. However, one thing to keep in mind is that trees spread their roots to brace themselves against wind, so be sure to update this video if you wake up one morning with a tree in your living room.
Nice! Tip on the reciprocal saw for newbies-. Keep it pushed firm against what you're cutting so it works well and does not shake you apart. Buy a few blades they will dull/ break. You can sharpen them. A big bar is cool. Doesn't need to be fancy like this one but bigger is better.
And wear gloves! I purchased a 120v Porter Cable saw from garage sale for this purpose. Almost shook my teeth loose a gave me 2 quarter sized blisters. I knew better but was careless
Our ten year old hit his foot on one of our tree roots today. I have been wanting the tree roots along the surface of the yard gone. I have spent the last 10 minutes scrolling videos. This is the only one I'm forwarding to my husband! Goodbye tree roots.
You are quite handy with the tools! Those roots were some serious business for sure. And, I promise to never plant my house near trees. A very valuable lesson!
Yep. We just learned this same thing over the last summer trying to clear a new trail and a 50'x50' plot for a new cabin. The reciprocating saw worked like a charm.
Brad, you had me cracking me up during this whole video lol. Your humor is just great and much needed when it comes to frustrating root removal. 😅 Been there, done that. A job well done as always sir!
You’re absolutely right about using a recip saw! I had to rip out a massive stump in my yard and I dug around it and used a big recip saw with the same pruning blades! It definitely got the job done!
@@marksmith1003 when a chainsaw blade makes contact with dirt, the blades will become dull almost immediately, with recip saw blades, they are made of strong materials that are built to cut into abrasive materials, like wood, nails, and metal, so the recip saw will work very well. If the roots are small enough, an axe will be a good choice.
Over 45 years ago I bought a corded Milwaukee Orbital Super Sawzall to cut out some rotted cast pipe under my house. Case included. I have several Makita cordless recip saws. When I have real work to do it is worth dragging out my Milwaukee. Fun video!!
I feel your pain! We bought an older house, and for the past three years I have been cutting trees down and pulling up roots. I have never seen a pry bar like that, but the search is on! Great video!
You've made a fantastic video, I love the flow of it along with good use of resources. Great job! It is time-consuming to put all the efforts in well organized video.
LOVE IT - I bought a $50 beater recip saw from Harbor Freight. It's like 14 amp, corded and I bought 2 of those Diablo Pruning blades. One 9" and the other is 12" and I just saw some dude here on YT yesterday with an 18" blade!!! He cut up a HUGE tree that had fallen on his property like a year before. It was something like 40' in length and I'm not sure how big the trunk was but eventually he got through it. Said it took him a few hours. I've got about a 25' tall tree in my front yard that's like 1/2 dead and really needs to come out. Spent the weekend pruning out the dead and now it's lopsided so I'll prune back the branches. No ready to take it all down....going to wait for cooler weather. And I'm thinking I'm going to use the beater recip saw to take the whole thing down but we'll see. Would have loved to see the after effects of all that hard work. This vid is a bit unsatisfying in that regard. If there is a part 2 to this vid, you should link it in your description. makes it easier to get more view
Wow! Wish I had seen this before we spent a couple of hours trying to do this with a mini chain saw and no pry tool!!! Great video. Funny too when you do acrobatics at the end of your pry tool. Thanks for the great info!
We've just started digging up some old roots too, using a early black and decker recip saw, isn't as fast as yours but seems to work and using a thick welders glove helps to dampen the vibrations and yes we too like the way the house builders plonked our house in the middle of several oak trees! Our next project is how to burn out a massive tree stump that should be fun!
A great video. It showed just how far tree roots can grow. I was contemplating buying a house with some cracking near trees. You have informed me how bad roots can be and It's put me off. Think you've saved me a lot of trouble Thank you
That's genius! I need to remove some fairly large roots and was thinking chain saw. But the teeth would go blunt in no time and take an age to sharpen. I would never have thought of a reciprocating saw! Thank you, I will be trying this out shortly.
I used a recepcating saw and a pic ax i didn't have that bar tool you were using. I got the job done by myself on a slope in my backyard after I removed all the tree roots, i put in a flower bed. Turned out nice. I enjoyed this video.
Charming and educational video with real world application. Thank you. Timely too; we have just removed a 30 year old deck and are leveling for pavers. But first, about these roots! I'm going out right now and show them my vintage Blank and Dexter recip saw. They'll get brittle overnight.
Another useful alternative to the reciprocating saw is to hire a stump grinder, a pedestrian type will do fine on those thick roots and with a lot less physical effort. If available, a mini digger with a ripper to rip out the other lateral roots. The mini digger will also finish off the basic site work.
I learned to keep digging around the root or like in my case you cut through a sprinkler pvc pipe. Wasn't happy. Felt like an archaeologist carefully digging up bones(roots)... The reciprocating saw makes such a difference. Was hand sawing these out years ago.
Damn! I thought my backyard was the only one to have this problem. Thanks for the info, because I'm going out to get some of those reciprocating saw blades and plan my spring. I'm working out now in preparation for the job.
I've done this before and found that dirt will dull your blade prematurely, so digging out at several cut points and trying your best to not let the blade drag through the dirt extends the use of the blade x3 at least. Still, very satisfying to create a clean slate for your project.
@@salvadormonella8953 I should have told you I live in AR. and we grow rocks here as well as cotton. Either way, I find less dirt grinding on the blade makes for a longer lasting blade.
@@jimgraham4673 Arkansas is home to the world's only diamond-hunting focused publicly accessible park, so I'll BET you got some stones there! I've never been to AR, but your freeway patrol sure seems to be on the hunt for fast Dodge Chargers all the time, if youtube is any indicator. I've been to 39 of the 50 states, & AR is on my list, but as of now it's one of 11 I haven't been to yet. Out here in California, our soil is like sponge cake. I have thrust many blades into much dirt & never had a problem. I chalk it up not so much to our insubstantial soil, but to the superior blades I buy, and to my deft Sawzall handling. Cheers.
Amazing job! That demolition bar is great, I'm already going on Amazon to look for one. I did a similar job in my back yard last summer, but all I had was a pick ax and crow bar. I found that sharpening the pick ax with an angle grinder every 30 mins or so really helped hack through the roots, but I swear I felt stiff for two weeks and almost still feel the shocks and vibrations in my shoulders from hitting those damn roots 9 months later.
Great stuff. Not nearly enough of these on TH-cam. I note the pressure washer idea as well as the warning on the possibility of the tree falling. My problem is roots blocked my agricultural plastic perforated drain pipe with tiny roots. The tree is huge but the area i am removing is about 10% of the circle and no closer than the drip line so I guess it will be fine, roots have lifted pavers on a cement base so its quite a job. Otherwise in heavy rain my yard is like a marsh. A follow up video about your yard and the tree may get a bit if interest. I am getting older but you remind me of my younger self finding it hard to let the bastard beat me.
If you had the room to use an axe, I've found an axe to be pretty effective in cutting through roots in the ground. My project was digging a trench for a drain pipe in my yard, but the trench encountered all kinds of tree roots. I used a reciprocating saw with a diablo blade (12" !) and it only got me "so far" until my neighbor demonstrated his axe on the remaining roots...
Seems like the kind of stuff I do many times. Always better to try and solve a problem first before hiring someone and spending a lot of money. I’ll bet you got it looking great I loved watching you work. Enjoyed the video. Thanks.
I've got this leverage tool, I've got to use it. Glad you finally realised to start with the thinner ends of the roots first and working your eay back to the main trunk.
Trees have more than enough roots to live from, a few surface roots should be ok. Unless you live in a rocky area where the trees can barely root correctly. Then once cut the area Just apply a good coat of back paint, the root just not re-grow there.
That was strangely satisfying to see you overcome those obstacles. I also have a root problem, but after an hour of that I would definitely need a chiropractor. 😅
Insane! I trimmed a Red Maple. Learning how to get rid of the roots. Good job sir. Take of your back though. My suggestion is to get rid of the tree and plant some appropriate for the yard
After seeing this video and being convinced that it was a workable solution I took the recommendation and got Diablo Pruning Blades and the Gutster Demolition Tool Pry Bar (I have a Ryobi cordless reciprocating saw). My results? The Diablo blades are beasts - they cut fast and don't seem to react badly to the rocks in the soil. That pry bar is strong (much better than any shovel handle), and I'm bearing down on it with all the force necessary to bring up the roots, including snapping the offshoots. Thank you for your advice!
FYI..One summer when i was a kid i worked on a farm and we spent a month cutting trees and above ground roots ,,,owner had us use a pressure washer to remove dirt from around roots,,its messy but makes cutting and getting to roots alot easier,,it also allows baldes to stay sharp longer,,,now fast forward 50 years im faced with alot of pine tree roots in my yard ruining lawnmower blades,,im going to use pressure washer but i will buy a few of the diablo blades
For any new watchers, I highly recommend using the saw to cut parallel to the roots and into the ground to cut off the branched off stuff holding it down. The blade is a small price to pay for a much easier job. You can clean up the small stuff with a rented tool for that.
Thanks for the tip. I went and ordered some of those Diablo reciprocating saw blades. I had root problem also. Not as bad as yours, but these blades made my work easy. Thank you sir.
Great video. At 73, my mind says you ise to do that AND you still can! But I know, the "juice" just isn't there anymore. Very frustrating! Good job! Always so satisfying doing yourself.
Took me a minute…or more, to get why you’re laughing. 😆 My story is being 71 with a brain not firing on all cylinders…and I’m sticking to it! I have a Crape Myrtle I planted near the southwest corner of my house as a 3’ youngster that’s now 18’ tall with roots in the driveway (dirt) and flower bed that are sending up suckers so it needs to come out. Hate to do it because it’s made a big difference in cooling the house but suckering roots doesn’t work for me. I love the tool you are using and hope I can find one. Has to be less expensive than renting a stump grinder. I’m sure my neighbor’s son (19) who helps me with yard work I’m not able to do will be thrilled to hear about this project! 😉
You definitely needed to do more cuts then raise. We just removed the last 3 of 7 trees we wanted to get rid of, that was causing house damage. We still have 4, but they are staying. I did plant 2 Nellie Stevens hollies away from the house in flower beds where they should be. Good job! Don't forget to post what you did after a while.
Great Job. Your heart is in the right place. A suggestion, power wash the steps. Just use water. I did the sidewalk 3 years ago and they are still bright.
Hey, I just got my arborist certification a couple days ago and today I came across this video teaching people how to remove tree roots. After watching the video, I thought, “I bet I could open up your channel and find a video about that tree deteriorating” and voilà. Should probably change this title to “What NOT To Do To Tree Root Systems”.
Curious: How did your oak tree fare following your root pruning? I've been told that cutting a root will kill a part of the tree. Did you lose any branches?
Every time I see some news report where a tree fell from a wind storm I immediately think that the tree was damaged or sick. I lived in an apartment once where a tree fell down and I could see exactly what happened. They cut the roots to put in a sidewalk and the tree literally had no support on one side.
I used the diablo 12 inch blade with sawsall and it worked well for me. Took time and patience, but works. Filled remaining holes four or five times over three month period.
I did the same thing last year after taking down a 60ft tree. I had a guy come in with a stump grinder, but he didn’t get all the roots. I had three Batteries for my reciprocating saw for continuous work. This was one of the most physical work digging out the roots, especially the ones the branch out in all different directions. He wasn’t kidding about the vibrations, I had many callouses afterwards.
About a decade ago, my silver maple had a root sticking out of the ground. This gave me a mowing obstacle. So I used my reciprocating saw and cut the about five-inch diameters in two places. I left the root in. Today, I found the root healed itself on both cuts and is now about 15 inches in diameter. I did pressure wash, but it is going to be a job to remove it. As mentioned elsewhere here, cutting the root below will kill some of the branches above. Silver maples grow quickly, give great shade, shred parachute seeds that fill the eves, and when the trees are very large, one will find branches that need removing after every mild storm and weekly without a storm.
Thanks for the video. I gathered that you intended to remove the tree completely. Not sure if anyone else suggested a method of using a chain and COME-ALONG. Wrap one end of the chain several feet up the tree trunk or sturdy large branch and use the tool cable with snap-hook to circle the ground roots , one at-a- time. Then crank on the hoist to break some of the smaller roots that go deeper into the soil.. It may be easier on your BACK.
I’m surprised you didn’t bring out the ventrac. Hook it into that V notch of the roots and pull. I removed an overgrown bush from the front corner of the house. All I had was a sawzall, and went to town on the roots. Then we used a tow strap and a truck to pull out the root ball. Even though we hacked away at another bush just a few feet away, that thing keeps coming back to life.
Thank you for this video. I have been trying to figure out how to cut back some crepe myrtle roots so I can do a landscaped path . I was thinking of a chainsaw but the reciprocating saw is better !
Would it help if, after sawing through the exposed root sections, you were to swipe the blade along the underside of the main root so as to sever the smaller web-like roots growing out from them?
I never thought to let my blade go down into the dirt. This will be cake. Thank you for showing me that. I have a small stump about to meet its demise.
I followed the exact steps, but I waited until after a good rain to remove the roots. The ground was much softer and it made a big difference in the amount of energy needed.
No trip to the ER and no cuts to the utilities -that’s a win!
One thing I definitely learned from watching this video was never under any circumstances plant houses near trees 😆 🤣 😂 that was a good one! but those were some serious roots 💪😉👍
You can plant some trees, just do some research before planting ✌️😎
Depends what type of tree 🌲.
😂😂😂😂😂 definitely not the two story type. Even more plumbing problems 😂😂😂
0⁰⁰9
😂😂😂😂❤
Man versus tree. Those roots are as big as the tree. You make it very fun to watch. Thank you!
Thank you for posting this. I will definitely hire someone to this job!!! You are the man!!!
In an age of instant gratification, it's important to appreciate slow, methodical, patient work like this. It's not always about doing something in a rush, as fast as possible, at any cost. Sometimes it's about one guy and some simple hand tools, experiencing a sense of accomplishment from chipping away at something, bit by bit, at last earning a long-awaited victory. Some life lessons in there....
100% agree. The same thing went through my head while I watched this.
Biggest lesson I learned was not planting houses next to trees. :) I would add that placing a hard board under the lever bar may prevent it from sinking into the soil and give you more leverage action. Great video!
House Planting!!! 🤣🤣🤣
Well done! Enjoyed watching the video and all of the spinal adjustments. 😅 In my experience, the reciprocating saw, a hatchet for the stubborn little ones (yes, you will dull it but you will sharpen it later) and the pry bar are key. I use a 60 inch pinch point pry bar that you can also use to break small roots. One tip that I find very effective: Cut some of those big roots from the surface like you did but then just -wait- a few weeks/months if possible for the root to die. For most trees, dead roots are very brittle, and they will come up easier, often just by breaking with the leverage of lifting one end. So if I were to tackle a project like that on my own yard I would get out there and do as many cuts as I could from the surface and then just focus on other projects and things for a few weeks if while I wait for the roots to die/dry out .
Smart
Brad, great tips on how to remove roots. I had a giant oak tree cut down to a sump last year. After a heavy rain dampen the soil, the reciprocal saw cut through the wood and soil with ease. Afterwards the pry bar can now lift the trunk and snap the roots underneath.
There are roots everywhere in my yard. Every planting project requires my reciprocating saw for root removal. I find saw blades with carbide tipped teeth are better than the pruning blades. Because you're sticking the blade in the ground, they hit rocks, etc. And this dulls a pruning blade quickly. The carbide blades are much more resilient. I've found myself unknowingly cutting through a rock.
My roots are seriously gigantic. It's just me, myself and I. I will go digging again and think about what to do. Great video.
After watching this, I went out and bought a saw with the diablo blade. Just removed some huge tree roots now and it worked a treat. Thanks from Australia!
next week we will hear that the tree fell on your house. Cut the tree down before you remove roots from the ground. The root you cut may save your life.
Rent a small stump grinder it works great just grind them down below the surface whole easier
Brad, I love your positive attitude and your humor! You are a natural born teacher. Can’t wait to see more of your home improvement videos! Thank You for sharing this.
I love his reciprocal saw. It would scare me though. I drill with my eye closed…
@@shayj8883 😂
This video will be handy evidence for your neighbor after the very large tree (formerly held up by very large roots) crushes his house. Your insurance company will dump you without paying one dime.
Not kidding. This is real.
Consult a professional arborist before cutting roots.
@@ridermak4111 True but ONLY if tree failed shortly after surface roots removed. For this reason I’m giving notice to my town that if they decide not to remove their tree that’s destroying my driveway plus sidewalk & curb (all my responsibility to maintain by code), I will remove roots and THEY are on notice that a failure is on them. Importantly town planted tree 3’ from driveway tho code sez 10’ minimum.
@@gr8dvd
WOW !
There’s a huge difference between concrete being damaged in slow motion, and innocent people being killed in an instant. But it sounds like you don’t much care about that difference.
….you’re responsible for the curb, too?
Yeah, right.
My sidewalk has been lifted by roots in two places, and lots of my neighbors have had the same problem. None of us has ever whined about it. I guess we like the shade.
This is why I took out all the big trees in my yard. Made life much easier.
I enjoyed the video - been there, done that - but I used another tool that I have - I have a 3000psi pressure washer - yep! I'm too old to be prying so one day I tried it. It's messy, but I found the water allows the dirt to loosen the ground. The 2nd day, I watered the area a lot. Then the roots + the reciprocating saw worked great. I also used the pressure washer for placing a 4x4 post for the mailbox. Easiest installation EVER.
This was such a great video to watch. Loved your sense of humor while getting this job done.
Another youtuber used a grinder with a masonry grinding wheel to grind the roots down flat, to below lawn level, then grew grass over it. Your method is more thorough. With the price of the sawblade and the prying tool being less than my landscapers’s hourly rate, I’m going to try it. However, one thing to keep in mind is that trees spread their roots to brace themselves against wind, so be sure to update this video if you wake up one morning with a tree in your living room.
😂😂😂
Surface roots don’t provide much stabilization for trees, that tree’s roots go very deep in the ground. They have very impressive root systems.
Nice! Tip on the reciprocal saw for newbies-. Keep it pushed firm against what you're cutting so it works well and does not shake you apart. Buy a few blades they will dull/ break. You can sharpen them. A big bar is cool. Doesn't need to be fancy like this one but bigger is better.
Good points. Thank you.
And wear gloves! I purchased a 120v Porter Cable saw from garage sale for this purpose. Almost shook my teeth loose a gave me 2 quarter sized blisters. I knew better but was careless
Our ten year old hit his foot on one of our tree roots today. I have been wanting the tree roots along the surface of the yard gone. I have spent the last 10 minutes scrolling videos. This is the only one I'm forwarding to my husband! Goodbye tree roots.
You are quite handy with the tools! Those roots were some serious business for sure. And, I promise to never plant my house near trees. A very valuable lesson!
Yep. We just learned this same thing over the last summer trying to clear a new trail and a 50'x50' plot for a new cabin. The reciprocating saw worked like a charm.
Brad, you had me cracking me up during this whole video lol. Your humor is just great and much needed when it comes to frustrating root removal. 😅 Been there, done that. A job well done as always sir!
This is no easy task and you did this alone. You’re a good man. Tackling this job by yourself.💪 Good work.
You’re absolutely right about using a recip saw! I had to rip out a massive stump in my yard and I dug around it and used a big recip saw with the same pruning blades! It definitely got the job done!
I am considering a similar but smaller scale job and am curious as to why the reciprocating saw is preferred to a chain saw?
@@marksmith1003 when a chainsaw blade makes contact with dirt, the blades will become dull almost immediately, with recip saw blades, they are made of strong materials that are built to cut into abrasive materials, like wood, nails, and metal, so the recip saw will work very well. If the roots are small enough, an axe will be a good choice.
@@pqworks9019
YEP !
You were fuuuuuuuuuuuny but hard-working !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I am following your lead,
Over 45 years ago I bought a corded Milwaukee Orbital Super Sawzall to cut out some rotted cast pipe under my house. Case included. I have several Makita cordless recip saws. When I have real work to do it is worth dragging out my Milwaukee. Fun video!!
I feel your pain! We bought an older house, and for the past three years I have been cutting trees down and pulling up roots. I have never seen a pry bar like that, but the search is on! Great video!
The pry bar looks like my pallet buster tool.
You've made a fantastic video, I love the flow of it along with good use of resources. Great job! It is time-consuming to put all the efforts in well organized video.
You did a great job. It shows how tough root removal really is.
LOVE IT - I bought a $50 beater recip saw from Harbor Freight. It's like 14 amp, corded and I bought 2 of those Diablo Pruning blades. One 9" and the other is 12" and I just saw some dude here on YT yesterday with an 18" blade!!! He cut up a HUGE tree that had fallen on his property like a year before. It was something like 40' in length and I'm not sure how big the trunk was but eventually he got through it. Said it took him a few hours.
I've got about a 25' tall tree in my front yard that's like 1/2 dead and really needs to come out. Spent the weekend pruning out the dead and now it's lopsided so I'll prune back the branches. No ready to take it all down....going to wait for cooler weather. And I'm thinking I'm going to use the beater recip saw to take the whole thing down but we'll see.
Would have loved to see the after effects of all that hard work. This vid is a bit unsatisfying in that regard. If there is a part 2 to this vid, you should link it in your description. makes it easier to get more view
Honestly, this was so entertaining and I don’ even have roots I need to remove!!
OMG That root is giving you the business!!!
Wow! Wish I had seen this before we spent a couple of hours trying to do this with a mini chain saw and no pry tool!!! Great video. Funny too when you do acrobatics at the end of your pry tool. Thanks for the great info!
Chainsaws are destroyed in dirt
We've just started digging up some old roots too, using a early black and decker recip saw, isn't as fast as yours but seems to work and using a thick welders glove helps to dampen the vibrations and yes we too like the way the house builders plonked our house in the middle of several oak trees! Our next project is how to burn out a massive tree stump that should be fun!
You should use a stump grinder. Fast and easy.
I had no idea there were pruning blades. Just ordered a 6-pack of these. Can’t wait to clear some old roots!
A great video. It showed just how far tree roots can grow. I was contemplating buying a house with some cracking near trees. You have informed me how bad roots can be and It's put me off.
Think you've saved me a lot of trouble
Thank you
Thanks for the great video! I usually blast the roots with a power washer to better expose them, helps out a ton
That's genius! I need to remove some fairly large roots and was thinking chain saw. But the teeth would go blunt in no time and take an age to sharpen. I would never have thought of a reciprocating saw! Thank you, I will be trying this out shortly.
I do tree work and your way is much better I send your video to my buddies... your tools are going
to help us thanks.... But A dingo is the best thing
I used a recepcating saw and a pic ax i didn't have that bar tool you were using. I got the job done by myself on a slope in my backyard after I removed all the tree roots, i put in a flower bed. Turned out nice. I enjoyed this video.
Lenox makes a SUPER pruning blad that cuts in both directions! They have many lengths too! Certainly a favorite of mine!
Charming and educational video with real world application. Thank you. Timely too; we have just removed a 30 year old deck and are leveling for pavers. But first, about these roots! I'm going out right now and show them my vintage Blank and Dexter recip saw. They'll get brittle overnight.
Another useful alternative to the reciprocating saw is to hire a stump grinder, a pedestrian type will do fine on those thick roots and with a lot less physical effort. If available, a mini digger with a ripper to rip out the other lateral roots. The mini digger will also finish off the basic site work.
Hahaha another useful alternative is to pay someone money for other tools. No kidding!!! Not the point of the video.
This video makes me want to be your friend. Great stuff man.
WOW, this is just back breaking work. Thanks for the video and be careful out there.
Great job. Yes, certain trees have shallow roots that should not be planted near homes, like maples.
I learned to keep digging around the root or like in my case you cut through a sprinkler pvc pipe. Wasn't happy. Felt like an archaeologist carefully digging up bones(roots)... The reciprocating saw makes such a difference. Was hand sawing these out years ago.
just curious, how do you determine which root can remove and which root can't remove? Just afraid of cutting root may cause tree fall in wind.
That's why he cut the roots facing his house, so his neighbors won't get damaged
I dont think he does
If you read the dropdown description he says he's taking out the tree out in the fall.
Diablo blades are the BEST! Love them. Thanks for an informative video!
Damn! I thought my backyard was the only one to have this problem. Thanks for the info, because I'm going out to get some of those reciprocating saw blades and plan my spring. I'm working out now in preparation for the job.
I've done this before and found that dirt will dull your blade prematurely, so digging out at several cut points and trying your best to not let the blade drag through the dirt extends the use of the blade x3 at least. Still, very satisfying to create a clean slate for your project.
Sounds to me like you're using the wrong blade. I've never had this problem.
@@salvadormonella8953 I should have told you I live in AR. and we grow rocks here as well as cotton. Either way, I find less dirt grinding on the blade makes for a longer lasting blade.
@@jimgraham4673 Arkansas is home to the world's only diamond-hunting focused publicly accessible park, so I'll BET you got some stones there! I've never been to AR, but your freeway patrol sure seems to be on the hunt for fast Dodge Chargers all the time, if youtube is any indicator. I've been to 39 of the 50 states, & AR is on my list, but as of now it's one of 11 I haven't been to yet. Out here in California, our soil is like sponge cake. I have thrust many blades into much dirt & never had a problem. I chalk it up not so much to our insubstantial soil, but to the superior blades I buy, and to my deft Sawzall handling. Cheers.
Carbide blades hold up better in the case where you have to play in the dirt...
You made this harder by not cutting it up in small pieces bud (as you said later on). I do like the demo bar idea. Awesome
I have used reciprocating saws to do the same thing when I take out mulberry trees when I do yard clean-ups.
Amazing job! That demolition bar is great, I'm already going on Amazon to look for one. I did a similar job in my back yard last summer, but all I had was a pick ax and crow bar. I found that sharpening the pick ax with an angle grinder every 30 mins or so really helped hack through the roots, but I swear I felt stiff for two weeks and almost still feel the shocks and vibrations in my shoulders from hitting those damn roots 9 months later.
Thank you for creating the video. I will attempt to tackle the job of cutting a piece out of a large oak root heading towards my house...💪💪💪
Brilliant work my friend! I am dealing with the same issue in the front yard. Hopefully the tree service I have hired will take the same steps
Great stuff. Not nearly enough of these on TH-cam.
I note the pressure washer idea as well as the warning on the possibility of the tree falling. My problem is roots blocked my agricultural plastic perforated drain pipe with tiny roots. The tree is huge but the area i am removing is about 10% of the circle and no closer than the drip line so I guess it will be fine, roots have lifted pavers on a cement base so its quite a job. Otherwise in heavy rain my yard is like a marsh. A follow up video about your yard and the tree may get a bit if interest. I am getting older but you remind me of my younger self finding it hard to let the bastard beat me.
Thanks for blade and demolition pry bar recommendations. AND thank you for making my project look easy compared to what you dealt with!
If you had the room to use an axe, I've found an axe to be pretty effective in cutting through roots in the ground. My project was digging a trench for a drain pipe in my yard, but the trench encountered all kinds of tree roots. I used a reciprocating saw with a diablo blade (12" !) and it only got me "so far" until my neighbor demonstrated his axe on the remaining roots...
All spinal problems fixed. Nice one mate. 🔥
Seems like the kind of stuff I do many times. Always better to try and solve a problem first before hiring someone and spending a lot of money. I’ll bet you got it looking great I loved watching you work. Enjoyed the video. Thanks.
I've got this leverage tool, I've got to use it.
Glad you finally realised to start with the thinner ends of the roots first and working your eay back to the main trunk.
A farm jack would work really well. Thanks for the video
How has the tree held up since removing the roots?? I’m worried about the tree dying from some of the roots being removed.
Trees have more than enough roots to live from, a few surface roots should be ok. Unless you live in a rocky area where the trees can barely root correctly. Then once cut the area Just apply a good coat of back paint, the root just not re-grow there.
Dios
see follow-on video "How To Remove Trees Easy DIY"
Id be really interested to see how it looks, I mean there's no chance this tree survived unscathed that was a major root.
I think in video he said was taking tree down before he did patio
Yep.... that was me also. 8" tree roots are no joke NICELY done and I got a great laugh, also. Cheers!
That was strangely satisfying to see you overcome those obstacles. I also have a root problem, but after an hour of that I would definitely need a chiropractor. 😅
Insane! I trimmed a Red Maple. Learning how to get rid of the roots. Good job sir. Take of your back though. My suggestion is to get rid of the tree and plant some appropriate for the yard
After seeing this video and being convinced that it was a workable solution I took the recommendation and got Diablo Pruning Blades and the Gutster Demolition Tool Pry Bar (I have a Ryobi cordless reciprocating saw). My results? The Diablo blades are beasts - they cut fast and don't seem to react badly to the rocks in the soil. That pry bar is strong (much better than any shovel handle), and I'm bearing down on it with all the force necessary to bring up the roots, including snapping the offshoots. Thank you for your advice!
FYI..One summer when i was a kid i worked on a farm and we spent a month cutting trees and above ground roots ,,,owner had us use a pressure washer to remove dirt from around roots,,its messy but makes cutting and getting to roots alot easier,,it also allows baldes to stay sharp longer,,,now fast forward 50 years im faced with alot of pine tree roots in my yard ruining lawnmower blades,,im going to use pressure washer but i will buy a few of the diablo blades
Will the root start burning because of the friction. Really scared
Stop, you're making my back hurt! Great job and perserverance.!
Great video and technique! I wonder whether the tree was destabilized or compromised in any meaningful way though.
Love the humor! Great job!
For any new watchers, I highly recommend using the saw to cut parallel to the roots and into the ground to cut off the branched off stuff holding it down. The blade is a small price to pay for a much easier job. You can clean up the small stuff with a rented tool for that.
Thanks for the tip. I went and ordered some of those Diablo reciprocating saw blades. I had root problem also. Not as bad as yours, but these blades made my work easy. Thank you sir.
Great video. At 73, my mind says you ise to do that AND you still can! But I know, the "juice" just isn't there anymore. Very frustrating! Good job! Always so satisfying doing yourself.
Took me a minute…or more, to get why you’re laughing. 😆 My story is being 71 with a brain not firing on all cylinders…and I’m sticking to it! I have a Crape Myrtle I planted near the southwest corner of my house as a 3’ youngster that’s now 18’ tall with roots in the driveway (dirt) and flower bed that are sending up suckers so it needs to come out. Hate to do it because it’s made a big difference in cooling the house but suckering roots doesn’t work for me. I love the tool you are using and hope I can find one. Has to be less expensive than renting a stump grinder. I’m sure my neighbor’s son (19) who helps me with yard work I’m not able to do will be thrilled to hear about this project! 😉
I'm genuinely excited about this project, waiting for part 2 :)
Good job. I just done one similar and cut at the tree and removed the above ground sections only.
You definitely needed to do more cuts then raise. We just removed the last 3 of 7 trees we wanted to get rid of, that was causing house damage. We still have 4, but they are staying. I did plant 2 Nellie Stevens hollies away from the house in flower beds where they should be. Good job! Don't forget to post what you did after a while.
I am going to buy this tool to remove my roots. Thank you for sharing.
Great Job. Your heart is in the right place. A suggestion, power wash the steps. Just use water. I did the sidewalk 3 years ago and they are still bright.
Great effort. I’d be cutting up the root for firewood. I’m lovin your pry tool
Hey, I just got my arborist certification a couple days ago and today I came across this video teaching people how to remove tree roots. After watching the video, I thought, “I bet I could open up your channel and find a video about that tree deteriorating” and voilà. Should probably change this title to “What NOT To Do To Tree Root Systems”.
💋......Too True. The advice in this video is terrible......👠
So what do you do if a tree is damaging the house?
@@solomani-42they don't teach that in Arborist class. 😂
Curious: How did your oak tree fare following your root pruning? I've been told that cutting a root will kill a part of the tree. Did you lose any branches?
Every time I see some news report where a tree fell from a wind storm I immediately think that the tree was damaged or sick. I lived in an apartment once where a tree fell down and I could see exactly what happened. They cut the roots to put in a sidewalk and the tree literally had no support on one side.
My reseach was measure the perimeter of the base of three and that is how far out you can trim roots.
That looks like a great back adjustment!
Cool video and great explanation of the tools needed for this type of job. About to do some similar work around my home!
Thank you, just saved me the $200 tool rental!
I always enjoy these. I need to watch more.
I used the diablo 12 inch blade with sawsall and it worked well for me. Took time and patience, but works. Filled remaining holes four or five times over three month period.
I did the same thing last year after taking down a 60ft tree. I had a guy come in with a stump grinder, but he didn’t get all the roots. I had three Batteries for my reciprocating saw for continuous work. This was one of the most physical work digging out the roots, especially the ones the branch out in all different directions. He wasn’t kidding about the vibrations, I had many callouses afterwards.
Your such an inspiration sir ! That is why I still keep making my own TH-cam videos ! 🤙🏼
About a decade ago, my silver maple had a root sticking out of the ground. This gave me a mowing obstacle. So I used my reciprocating saw and cut the about five-inch diameters in two places. I left the root in. Today, I found the root healed itself on both cuts and is now about 15 inches in diameter. I did pressure wash, but it is going to be a job to remove it. As mentioned elsewhere here, cutting the root below will kill some of the branches above. Silver maples grow quickly, give great shade, shred parachute seeds that fill the eves, and when the trees are very large, one will find branches that need removing after every mild storm and weekly without a storm.
Thanks for the video. I gathered that you intended to remove the tree completely. Not sure if anyone else suggested a method of using a chain and COME-ALONG. Wrap one end of the chain several feet up the tree trunk or sturdy large branch and use the tool cable with snap-hook to circle the ground roots , one at-a- time. Then crank on the hoist to break some of the smaller roots that go deeper into the soil.. It may be easier on your BACK.
This is crazy excellent in landscaping 101
+ hey every one-
Get the Science to treeroots as the stabilizer
Or ure tree will fall the wrong
Way-
Video is voltaic great-
Yay. Been fighting old hedge for 2 yearsr slowly. Didn't think a power saw would cope with going in dirt. TIme to go find it in garage!
Fantastic video, those are some gnarly roots
I’m surprised you didn’t bring out the ventrac. Hook it into that V notch of the roots and pull.
I removed an overgrown bush from the front corner of the house. All I had was a sawzall, and went to town on the roots. Then we used a tow strap and a truck to pull out the root ball. Even though we hacked away at another bush just a few feet away, that thing keeps coming back to life.
Thank you for this video. I have been trying to figure out how to cut back some crepe myrtle roots so I can do a landscaped path . I was thinking of a chainsaw but the reciprocating saw is better !
Would it help if, after sawing through the exposed root sections, you were to swipe the blade along the underside of the main root so as to sever the smaller web-like roots growing out from them?
I never thought to let my blade go down into the dirt. This will be cake. Thank you for showing me that. I have a small stump about to meet its demise.
It will really dull the blade quickly, so just buy a pack of cheap ones if you need to do a lot of it.
Wow...those roots are crazy.
I had the same issue with oak roots when we bought this house we are in. I did exactly what you did to cut those roots out using 12 inch blades.