Lonnie I love your videos. You are a true outdoorsman. It is a great pleasure to learn from you. You seem to be a bushcrafter first and a videomaker second, meaning you are very authentic and not trying to put on an act. Your years of experience and your outdoor skills really show in your videos. I hope to one day become as knowledgeable as you when it comes to the outdoors. Greetins from Germany. (:
I feel for you, Buddy. I’ve done this many times. I finally got some 5 ton steel pulleys. I got my rope up in the trees similar to your way and I’d use my pulleys and ropes to guide my tree to a precision drop. Got to where we could drive a stake. It’s a process. Your come along is a fine tool. I used my pickup (no snow). Good on you for saving your cabin. Prevention is ten times cheaper then fixing a problem. Texas
Hi Lonnie, when I worked for an arborist, we used a big sling shot called a "big shot" to shoot a string tied bean bag through the crotch of a tree, then tied off a bigger rope as you did, but I was really impressed with your wrench sling shot. In the bush you have to make due with what you have! The cabin ceiling looks great, I'm finishing the ceiling in my cabin too.
I was concerned for a moment there when you were first talking about letting the tree fall eventually. I'm glad you decided to go ahead and take care of that widowmaker.
Boy , that was an adventure , wish I was there, love doing that stuff , the cabin looked very cozy and peaceful, love your adventures , stay warm and safe... Happy Easter .. HE HAS RISEN !!! Amen .
Tell you what you have one of the most creative minds I have ever seen when it comes to taking care of things out in the wilderness. Thank you so very much for sharing them with us!
A tree being hung up in the other trees is always preferable to being hung up in the rafters of your cabin! Stay safe and warm my friends. It's always a good day when I find another one of your videos!
My favorite part was the hotdog/burrito warmer, other than not hitting the cabin (which looks great inside btw) with the tree. Thanks Lonnie and Connie.
Hi Lonnie, I love the ways you brought down those trees and both protected your cabin and also freed up your snowmobile while away from your cabin. That is American engenuity and something I love so much.
It's such cheap insurance to have a rope on a problem tree. It gives you so much more control, and as in this case, helps if the tree gets hung up. Great job Lonnie and Connie, thanks for the video!
Measure and make yourself a cast iron grate with several twisted piece. Rustic looking and will add to the look of your stove pipe and the cabin. Note make it removable for future maintenance. Good work to the both of you guys in falling those trees.
Excellent work as always. Very nice job noticing the danger of that tree. It could have been a serious disaster. Now you will be safe. Thank you for sharing Lonnie and Connie. God bless and enjoy the coming spring.
So happy you were able to repair your roof. The ceiling looks so very nice with the corner finished and the trim board. Glad your rope-along was so handy to pull your snow machine out as well. Take Care
Lonnie makes it look as though there is no problem that can't be solved. I wish that were true down here in the southern parts of the continent. Much admiration from Canada
I would have like to see your entire cutting procedure. That big birch will certainly give you a lot of nice firewood. I just threw a piece of white birch in my stove and the BTU's are flowing. Thanks for the tour.
Hope you have a blessed Easter. Glad you were able to bring down that tree safely. With that lean, I would have tried to get it down, too! Looks like you're going to have quite a bit of firewood after it seasons, a bit. Thanks for sharing. PS: Check in the sheet metal / bar stock area of Lowes or Home Depot (if you have on or the equivalent in your area). They have perforated sheets. For example, here's one at Lowes: Model #11244 Steelworks 24"x 36" Aluminum Decorative Sheet Metal Make a frame, like a picture frame, large enough to cover the opening. Insert the metal, cut to fit, as if it were the glass, into the frame. Cut a hole in the center to accept the stove pipe. That should "hide" the opening, yet meet the distance requirement for combustible materials. If you want to block air (heat) entering the attic area, same concept using a sheet of solid metal.
Love the channel - In addition to all the cool bushcraft knowledge, I always get a feeling of serenity from watching! Best regards to you Lonnie and your wife Connie.
For completing the punch-out in the ceiling for the stove flue, you can get a heating system grille, cut it in half and cut out a circle in the middle to fit the flue. That should be aesthetically fine and, being a grille, will shed most of the heat into the living space while preventing excess heat from reaching the adjacent wood structure.
Awesome video as always Lonnie. Those come along winches are worth their weight in gold. That big birch definitely had to come down. Now you have plenty of wood to burn. You and Connie have a wonderful and safe Easter. Stay safe and be well. Thanks for sharing.
Hello Conny hello Lonny Happy eastern to both of you You have Done a great job I think by the Last Video that you had to clear some more trees to make the cabin save . Well Done All the best wishes and God bless Yours Frank
Very smart decision Lonnie! When my folks were living just outside of 100 Mile House BC, they lived in a rustic little cabin surrounded by trees, a beautiful site with Rainbow Trout fishing galore out the back door.....that is, until the weather turned! And that was it, a wind storm came along one day and a large Poplar fell literally missing the cabin by a few feet, and that was enough for my folks! Sure, my Dad mentioned about clearing sll the close surrounding trees, but what they did instead was sell out and moved closer to town! A hard lesson to learn for tree lovers.....that is until one whacks you on the head! lol
Oooh! That Pancake put a spell on me! Nice! Wow.. a cracked tree... still standing, dont see that often. God Bless. Good catch Lonnie! Wise man keeps full awareness of his surroundings. Yeah.. my fear of the cut would be the jackknife of the lower end as a spearpoint towards the cabin or you standing there. Bounces being as they are. Two more trees and you could build another place! Super brilliant on the burrito cooker. Thank you two for sharing, Love you both. Hope you dont pain after all the work!
U did a fantastic job on clearing the tree from your roof,I watched the video where u repaired it. I think your ceiling on the inside looks great Lonnie. As for the hole where the stove pipe goes,I'd flash it out with thin aluminum,but then again your the Bushmaster. Enjoy all of the videos,wanted to wish U both Lonnie and Connie a very special Easter Sunday.
Did a good job on that ole tree. I was with ya on that fall. Hey Lonnie, I seen a insert I guess you call it for that stove pipe. I believe it was Shawn James My Self Reliance on the little workshop.. You might scan backwards on his videos but I think you could build that ok.. Happy Easter you guys.
I believe some shiny, copper flashing would look nice around the stove pipe. Don't know how practical it is but ... Enjoyed the video as always. Thank you for sharing.
The hotdog/burrito warmer is awesome I've seen it before on cars and trucks but never on a snowmobile absolutely brilliant! Some of the comments suggest a slingshot for getting lines up into trees I saw a few really nice forks in the brush/burn pile that would work nicely 😁👍
That hot dog cooker is awesome! I'm sure it's a common thing where sleds are used as a mode of transportation but not where I'm from. Such a very cool invention!!
Well good day Lonnie , Lloyd here again . I've used the string and Wrench idea in the past and will use it again in the future if needed , the cabin looks warm and welcoming and I like that food warming system you have there . Stay safe and well , best regards as always from Lloyd somewhere here in Southern Ontario Canada 🇨🇦.
I love the hotdog cooker. We've done something similar many times doing landscape work. Tie our lunch to the muffler of the mower. Nice hot lunch. Love it Happy Easter you guys. God bless and keep ya.
I used to work on the North Slope of the Brooks Range here in Alaska and out on the ice of the Arctic ocean. We were operating seismograph trucks. My truck had a walk-in enclosed back end over the engine area and we would occasionally put our foil wrapped meals on the exhaust of those diesel engines.
Hey Lonnie, I sure hope you and Connie are doing great there and are in good health. I still enjoy watching your videos and I hope you are doing great there. God bless you both 😎👍🍻🙏🙏🙏🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
@@Far-North-Bushcraft-Survival hey Lonnie, it's great to hear from you and I'm glad you both are doing great :) I have some friends up in Alaska and I have said to them about your TH-cam channel and so I have sent them the link and hopefully it will help get you a few more subscribers 😎👍 Have a great one and God bless 😎👍🍻
Mr. Lonnie, I am a new subscriber to your TH-cam videos. They are very informative and you discuss topics with extreme knowledge. So I've been going through your library and watching. I had spinal surgery in January and I am recovering slowly and found TH-cam to keep me from getting too bored.. love that cabin that you and Miss Connie built..and your dog is cool. Sorry this is a bit long. I live in lower Alabama with my wife and our dogs on 20 wooded acres. Originally from The Smoky Mountains and New England. We miss the snow ( not the shoveling). Please continue with these wonderful videos. Stay safe, and thank you for keeping my mind on the woods. Erol
We have come-a-longs also and I have three of them I think but they use wire cable and have a limited amount, usually about 10 - 12 feet I think. I like to call this one a rope-a-long since it uses rope and is capable of unlimited length as the rope is not stored on the unit itself.
@@Far-North-Bushcraft-Survival Ah, yet again I learn something from you. I haven't seen mine in a while. I'm trying to recall, wire cable or some type of webbing? But yeah limited length. I believe bout 4 ft. Thanks for the added info.
Lonnie, you just gave away my secret as How I string up Christmas Lights to my 30 foot tall Colorado Spruce tree in my front yard. Except I use an 1-1/4" socket and tie that with paracord and the other end to the beginning of a string of lights. Then I just sling it up over the top of the tree...maybe a few more than a few tries before I get it over the top Y-shaped branches at the very top. Well done Lonnie and happy Easter to you and your family!
Happy Easter to the two of ya! I know it’s not your job but I really wish you two post videos more often! A lot of us enjoy the content!
Agreed!
I would to but I think you we all should live life in reality. In our stay at home time your your posts were grate. live free THANK'S
Lonnie I love your videos. You are a true outdoorsman. It is a great pleasure to learn from you. You seem to be a bushcrafter first and a videomaker second, meaning you are very authentic and not trying to put on an act. Your years of experience and your outdoor skills really show in your videos. I hope to one day become as knowledgeable as you when it comes to the outdoors. Greetins from Germany. (:
the hot-dog cooker was priceless !
nice video
I feel for you, Buddy. I’ve done this many times. I finally got some 5 ton steel pulleys. I got my rope up in the trees similar to your way and I’d use my pulleys and ropes to guide my tree to a precision drop. Got to where we could drive a stake. It’s a process. Your come along is a fine tool. I used my pickup (no snow). Good on you for saving your cabin. Prevention is ten times cheaper then fixing a problem. Texas
I remember my father talking about trying to drive stakes. That was in the early 1900s before chain saws. Axes, a crosscut saw, and wedges.
Hi Lonnie, when I worked for an arborist, we used a big sling shot called a "big shot" to shoot a string tied bean bag through the crotch of a tree, then tied off a bigger rope as you did, but I was really impressed with your wrench sling shot. In the bush you have to make due with what you have! The cabin ceiling looks great, I'm finishing the ceiling in my cabin too.
Everytime I see the cabin interior I have to smile. I had a couch exactly like that years ago. Love each and every video! Yall be safe out there.
That's the couch everyone had or their grandparents had haha
I was concerned for a moment there when you were first talking about letting the tree fall eventually. I'm glad you decided to go ahead and take care of that widowmaker.
thats not a widowmaker thats a cabinbracker. Dont give cabinbreackers a chance! Fight against trees that can hit a cabin!
@@Franksmission it became a widowmaker when he felled it and it was caught up in another tree.
Backwoods engineering comes in handy. Thanks for sharing Lonnie
Lonnie and Connie, thanks for sharing and bringing us along , great little cooker , glad it all worked out, God bless !
I really enjoy your videos. Both of you seem to be very nice people. GOD bless you both.
Boy , that was an adventure , wish I was there, love doing that stuff , the cabin looked very cozy and peaceful, love your adventures , stay warm and safe... Happy Easter .. HE HAS RISEN !!! Amen .
Tell you what you have one of the most creative minds I have ever seen when it comes to taking care of things out in the wilderness. Thank you so very much for sharing them with us!
Thanks for sharing, Lonnie & Connie! Happy Easter!
A tree being hung up in the other trees is always preferable to being hung up in the rafters of your cabin! Stay safe and warm my friends. It's always a good day when I find another one of your videos!
..get those trees before they get you..lol..good one, have a happy Easter and stay safe..
My favorite part was the hotdog/burrito warmer, other than not hitting the cabin (which looks great inside btw) with the tree. Thanks Lonnie and Connie.
You are a great example of a couple in love Connie and Lonnie!
Thank you for being!
Nice video about the true life out there!
Stay safe and have fun!
Another excellent demo of how to safely remove dangerous trees from causing untold amounts of damage.
Thanks for sharing!!
Hi Lonnie, I love the ways you brought down those trees and both protected your cabin and also freed up your snowmobile while away from your cabin. That is American engenuity and something I love so much.
Always happy to see the notification you have a new video uploaded, Lonnie and Connie! Happy Easter!
Was holding my breath when that tree came down. Good work. Hot dog cooker great piece of kit.
Cool stuff.
It's such cheap insurance to have a rope on a problem tree. It gives you so much more control, and as in this case, helps if the tree gets hung up. Great job Lonnie and Connie, thanks for the video!
Have a Blessed Easter. He is Risen!
Measure and make yourself a cast iron grate with several twisted piece. Rustic looking and will add to the look of your stove pipe and the cabin. Note make it removable for future maintenance. Good work to the both of you guys in falling those trees.
Have a good Easter. Thank you for all the insightful survival tips and showing us around your part of the world 🌎
Excellent work as always. Very nice job noticing the danger of that tree. It could have been a serious disaster. Now you will be safe. Thank you for sharing Lonnie and Connie. God bless and enjoy the coming spring.
So happy you were able to repair your roof. The ceiling looks so very nice with the corner finished and the trim board. Glad your rope-along was so handy to pull your snow machine out as well. Take Care
Thanks for sharing guys.
Glad all turned out well Ethel trees.
Cabin looks good.👍
Hotdog cooker is genius. 😎👍
Burritos on the exhaust hahahaha that's awesome! Happy Easter 😎👍🏻
Glad The Come Along Got Ya's Out Of That Bind ! Great Looking Meal ! Happy Easter Friends ! ATB T God Bless
Going like before I watch, may as well
Nice work with the tree, but awesome with the place for your diner!! Greetings for both from Spain my friend. Always is a pleasure to see you.
Lonnie makes it look as though there is no problem that can't be solved. I wish that were true down here in the southern parts of the continent. Much admiration from Canada
I would have like to see your entire cutting procedure. That big birch will certainly give you a lot of nice firewood. I just threw a piece of white birch in my stove and the BTU's are flowing. Thanks for the tour.
Hope you have a blessed Easter. Glad you were able to bring down that tree safely. With that lean, I would have tried to get it down, too! Looks like you're going to have quite a bit of firewood after it seasons, a bit.
Thanks for sharing.
PS: Check in the sheet metal / bar stock area of Lowes or Home Depot (if you have on or the equivalent in your area). They have perforated sheets. For example, here's one at Lowes: Model #11244 Steelworks 24"x 36" Aluminum Decorative Sheet Metal
Make a frame, like a picture frame, large enough to cover the opening. Insert the metal, cut to fit, as if it were the glass, into the frame. Cut a hole in the center to accept the stove pipe. That should "hide" the opening, yet meet the distance requirement for combustible materials. If you want to block air (heat) entering the attic area, same concept using a sheet of solid metal.
That is an excellent idea as I had not thought of the decorative metal sheeting.
Love the channel - In addition to all the cool bushcraft knowledge, I always get a feeling of serenity from watching!
Best regards to you Lonnie and your wife Connie.
For completing the punch-out in the ceiling for the stove flue, you can get a heating system grille, cut it in half and cut out a circle in the middle to fit the flue. That should be aesthetically fine and, being a grille, will shed most of the heat into the living space while preventing excess heat from reaching the adjacent wood structure.
You did a lot of Hard Work,wishing you folks well.
We are sure glad your making the cabin safer. Good work work to the both of you. Blessing.
Awesome video as always Lonnie. Those come along winches are worth their weight in gold. That big birch definitely had to come down. Now you have plenty of wood to burn. You and Connie have a wonderful and safe Easter. Stay safe and be well. Thanks for sharing.
Hello Conny hello Lonny
Happy eastern to both of you
You have Done a great job
I think by the Last Video that you had to clear some more trees to make the cabin save .
Well Done
All the best wishes and God bless
Yours Frank
Good job keeping Connie and you safe!
Very smart decision Lonnie! When my folks were living just outside of 100 Mile House BC, they lived in a rustic little cabin surrounded by trees, a beautiful site with Rainbow Trout fishing galore out the back door.....that is, until the weather turned! And that was it, a wind storm came along one day and a large Poplar fell literally missing the cabin by a few feet, and that was enough for my folks!
Sure, my Dad mentioned about clearing sll the close surrounding trees, but what they did instead was sell out and moved closer to town! A hard lesson to learn for tree lovers.....that is until one whacks you on the head! lol
Thanks Lonnie and Connie, for another great video!
Happy Easter!
Oooh! That Pancake put a spell on me! Nice! Wow.. a cracked tree... still standing, dont see that often. God Bless. Good catch Lonnie! Wise man keeps full awareness of his surroundings. Yeah.. my fear of the cut would be the jackknife of the lower end as a spearpoint towards the cabin or you standing there. Bounces being as they are. Two more trees and you could build another place!
Super brilliant on the burrito cooker. Thank you two for sharing, Love you both. Hope you dont pain after all the work!
Great video, love the hotdog heater. Glad you got the tree down safely, Happy Easter, God bless!!
I'm glad no on was hurt. Take care.
Hello Lonnie and Connie! That blue berry pancake looked yummy!😙
I like that Burrito cooker - sure is a fine idea.
U did a fantastic job on clearing the tree from your roof,I watched the video where u repaired it. I think your ceiling on the inside looks great Lonnie. As for the hole where the stove pipe goes,I'd flash it out with thin aluminum,but then again your the Bushmaster. Enjoy all of the videos,wanted to wish U both Lonnie and Connie a very special Easter Sunday.
Did a good job on that ole tree. I was with ya on that fall. Hey Lonnie, I seen a insert I guess you call it for that stove pipe. I believe it was Shawn James My Self Reliance on the little workshop.. You might scan backwards on his videos but I think you could build that ok.. Happy Easter you guys.
Nice job on that dangerous tree. Happy Easter to you and Connie. Spring is here! I can’t wait to see some new upcoming videos.
Always happy to see what Connie and Lonnie are up to ,happy Easter to you
I believe some shiny, copper flashing would look nice around the stove pipe. Don't know how practical it is but ... Enjoyed the video as always. Thank you for sharing.
Y’all live a wonderful life, keep it up!👍👏🙏❤️
Lonnie, I ALWAYS enjoy your videos.
Good idea for bringing that tree down👍🏻 now you got firewood for some time as well😃 Good video as always🙇🏻♂️
You two just make me smile
That's pretty good cooking the burritos on your manifold. I used to do the same thing on my truck manifold.
I used to do the same on the manifold of my four wheel drive offroad seismograph truck on the North Slope of Alaska as well.
As always,good to see your adventures,stay safe and have a good easter
Awesome video and a Happy Easter to you both. Thanks for sharing.
The hotdog/burrito warmer is awesome I've seen it before on cars and trucks but never on a snowmobile absolutely brilliant! Some of the comments suggest a slingshot for getting lines up into trees I saw a few really nice forks in the brush/burn pile that would work nicely 😁👍
Hello up there... good to hear from you again..
Happy Easter to you Lonnie and Connie I'm glad that the tree fell where it did instead of on your cabin excellent job
That hot dog cooker is awesome! I'm sure it's a common thing where sleds are used as a mode of transportation but not where I'm from. Such a very cool invention!!
Alaskans doing Alaskan things! :-) Good video....cheers to you both!
Happy Easter, y'all! So very grateful. Thank you for sharing your logging adventure.
cool thing a hotdog exhoust cooker, is this an option with the snowmobile.
Some real top tips there guys! Loved the wee burrito warmer idea. 👍
Great to see you folks sorry to here your cabin met a tree head on. Have a HAPPY EASTER. Regards from South Jersey.
I'm lovin' your hot dog cooker! God bless!
Happy Easter Lonnie and Connie. Great tips. Cabin mods are looking awesome.
Glad your okay! Gee wiz , love that pancake too! Good job with the trees!
Hard work, but if you have the time to pace yourself, It will get done. I need one of them Hot-dog cookers for my off-road Side-by-side. Thanks Lonny.
Well good day Lonnie , Lloyd here again . I've used the string and Wrench idea in the past and will use it again in the future if needed , the cabin looks warm and welcoming and I like that food warming system you have there . Stay safe and well , best regards as always from Lloyd somewhere here in Southern Ontario Canada 🇨🇦.
Thanks folks take care
I love the hotdog cooker. We've done something similar many times doing landscape work. Tie our lunch to the muffler of the mower. Nice hot lunch. Love it
Happy Easter you guys. God bless and keep ya.
I used to work on the North Slope of the Brooks Range here in Alaska and out on the ice of the Arctic ocean. We were operating seismograph trucks. My truck had a walk-in enclosed back end over the engine area and we would occasionally put our foil wrapped meals on the exhaust of those diesel engines.
@@Far-North-Bushcraft-Survival
You e live an amazing life. Thanks for sharing with us.
God bless
Hey Lonnie, I sure hope you and Connie are doing great there and are in good health.
I still enjoy watching your videos and I hope you are doing great there.
God bless you both 😎👍🍻🙏🙏🙏🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Yes we are doing great. Glad you enjoy the videos
@@Far-North-Bushcraft-Survival hey Lonnie, it's great to hear from you and I'm glad you both are doing great :)
I have some friends up in Alaska and I have said to them about your TH-cam channel and so I have sent them the link and hopefully it will help get you a few more subscribers 😎👍
Have a great one and God bless 😎👍🍻
Thanks my friend for the shout out. I appreciate it.
It is a nice tiny house congratulation
Learned about exhaust heated food while doing a rotation at NTC. Never thought about actually bolting the canister on. Lost a lot of burritos!
Muy bonito lugar y muy buena técnica
The bob ross of bushcraft. Learned a ton from watching your videos.
Always enjoy seeing you two. Take good care, and have a blessed Easter.
You two are awesome .....great vid on being resilient. Enjoying your vids from Tug Hill Region Upstate NY. 🌲👍
The cealing in the cabin looks great Lonnie!
Great job Lonnie. Looks like things are coming around there. Thanks for the tips, and I'll see you on the next one.
Hi Connie and Lonnie good job x2 that is dangerous to do! Now you'll have lots of birch bark and firewood.
Mr. Lonnie, I am a new subscriber to your TH-cam videos. They are very informative and you discuss topics with extreme knowledge. So I've been going through your library and watching.
I had spinal surgery in January and I am recovering slowly and found TH-cam to keep me from getting too bored.. love that cabin that you and Miss Connie built..and your dog is cool.
Sorry this is a bit long.
I live in lower Alabama with my wife and our dogs on 20 wooded acres. Originally from The Smoky Mountains and New England. We miss the snow ( not the shoveling).
Please continue with these wonderful videos.
Stay safe, and thank you for keeping my mind on the woods. Erol
Thank you for subscribing and welcome to the channel. Glad you have been enjoying the videos.
Great vid Lonnie and Connie, hope you guys are doing good!
love too watch you two all the time ..
That info is so useful. Thanks for the teaching.
Happy Easter Lonnie and Connie , lived up in the YT and miss it
Where I'm from (South Eastern US) we call your "Rope-Along" a "Come Along".
We have come-a-longs also and I have three of them I think but they use wire cable and have a limited amount, usually about 10 - 12 feet I think. I like to call this one a rope-a-long since it uses rope and is capable of unlimited length as the rope is not stored on the unit itself.
@@Far-North-Bushcraft-Survival Ah, yet again I learn something from you. I haven't seen mine in a while. I'm trying to recall, wire cable or some type of webbing? But yeah limited length. I believe bout 4 ft. Thanks for the added info.
Thank you for yet another AWESOME video!
Good job Lonnie. Ceiling looks good.👍🖐
The ceiling in your cabin turned out pretty nice!! Thanks for the great video, and Happy Easter to both of you!
Lonnie, you just gave away my secret as How I string up Christmas Lights to my 30 foot tall Colorado Spruce tree in my front yard. Except I use an 1-1/4" socket and tie that with paracord and the other end to the beginning of a string of lights. Then I just sling it up over the top of the tree...maybe a few more than a few tries before I get it over the top Y-shaped branches at the very top. Well done Lonnie and happy Easter to you and your family!
You get to have all the fun! nice