Big thank you to Ethos for partnering with me. You can get a personalized insurance quote in 10 minutes for as low as $10/mo by using my code here: bit.ly/farmcraft101-ethos. Have an awesome weekend everybody!
After you cut the wedge out and after you start doing the final cut you need to use wedges, to both manipulate the tree and have some clearance so your saw doesn't get jammed
Your multi angle, multi camera cinematography beats Hollywood, keeping in mind that you are actually doing hard work along with making excellent video.
yeah drones and the numerous go-pro's and proper microphones and tri-pods are hella expensive then there is the editing, a beefy PC and a suite that lets you easily overlay text and adjust speed for timelapses can't be easy farmcraft, diesel creek, AVE, and several others are providing content that holywood would not bother with, yet are doing it at nearly holywood quality these dudes have a passion, and decided that showing good shots of how they do what they do was a value to society hell I bet a lot of people would directly pay these guys for help, because heavy equipment is tough to fix and maintain, yet is still something normal people may need to interact with someday
Arborist here, the main problem is that you are not lining up your back-cut with the hinge. Hard to see accurately on video obviously, but it looks like your back-cut was quite severly above your hinge when the saw got grabbed, which is a big no-no. Sometimes it's appropriate to back cut slightly (about half an inch) below the hinge, but never cut above it. Regarding the window trick-shot. Even limbs that are too short to reach something fragile from their landing spot can, given enough drop velocity, flex like a bow when landing on their tip and absolutely launch themselves like a vaulting pole. Always be extra careful when dropping, and preferably use a cut technique that drops the wood flat, rather than droop-n-drop. Love your content, and sorry for my lack of skill in the English language :)
"Ask me how I know" )) The same stuff. MS 361, left knee, 8 stitches. 1 month recovery. 30 minutes before that I took off my protective pants (because of heat). Safety rules are written in blood )) Always a pleasure to watch your videos. Like from a father I've never had. Thanks man and keep up a good job! )) And yes - I've seen your video where you stressed on having the protective pants on, but at some point I was like "Oh, what can even happen? I'm finishing my job here. 7 hours without an incident" and then MS 361 "explained" me ))) Lesson learned (the hard way).
59:59 those Stihl saws have a flexible rubber boot between the cylinder and carb mount, they can get flex cracks in them causing a slight intake leak which causes a lean condition at idle, causing a stall
With your narration, multiple camera angles, and the way you keep it very interesting, your videos are always great and better than most of what Hollywood puts out. Thanks for the videos John and keep them coming!
I spent the entirety of my youth working around trees cutting and chainsaws. Mostly with my family cutting firewood for sale, but in High School I worked for a tree trimming company for 3 years. You done did good work. The only damage I every really saw was almost identical to your broken window. Limb lands just perfect and launches like a spring. That guy was a damn good saw man in the bucket and out of it. It happens to everyone sometimes. Still did a lot of good work for your friend with no real issues that weren't easily fixed.
Man, remind me to never take for granted the newer lifts where you just hit a button while you drive the lift to extend and retract the axles... Great video as always!
Would love to know a little more about your background. E.g. where'd you learn all these things, have you always been around farms, any odd jobs you've had, etc? I'm sure you've got plenty of good stories. Love your videos. Perfect for unwinding on Friday. Thank you!
Hi Jon, safety first and to infinity, I mean who are we going to watch on a Friday afternoon?? Seriously you are to good to not have around for your family and your viewers. Many thanks from UK.
48:40 if only there were some wooden shutters that they could have closed first to protect the windows… 🤔 Heh, I guess we could have all seen the possibility there but been more interested in getting the job over with. And the cost of paying ground crew is way more than a pane of glass. I’d just be happy that the tree guy went home intact
19:53 Your camera shot of the topping was great. At 35:01 I see the Why this video turned out so well, it was the head camera person expertise. Your Dam project and this tree work were great content and I hope a nice supplement to a farmers income.
I would recommend a self retracting lanyard for boom lift work ( they are now the industry standard) because not only will they soften your fall like your fixed lanyard, but they act like a seat belt and may prevent you from being ejected from the basket in the first place (once you are ejected and take a 6 ft fall it is difficult to self rescue). I Iove the channel and all of your content (even if it makes me jealous haha).
The requirement where I was employed was 100% tie off if you're in it for any reason. Good call on the retracter. Check out the videos of people getting thrown out of lifts unloading them. I don't want to bring you bad luck, but you need to unload the lift as in sell it.
I cut trees from a lift as well, though not for a career. Couple possibilities: 1. Have someone with you in the basket. They can hold branches and keep them from whacking you or dropping where you don't want them. No putting the saw down after every cut either. It's a game changer. 2. Cut the lower limbs off first and work up the tree. Limbs then fall right around the base of the tree without hitting and bouncing off stuff. Can't do that if the tree is so rotten that stuff would fall off from above. Love watching you work!
Chainsaw is german quality ;) In germany, such kind of treework is only allowed by special trained people. And only with a lot of body protection like helmet, protection for body and legs, etc.. I do a lot of cutting wood at home, but I would never climp up on a tree which I will cut down or use a boom lift. Great work and respect that you do such dangerous jobs!
Always, Always, Always cut your lower limbs first. It will let your upper cuts drop straight down or you can direct your higher cuts better and safer. lower limbs left on can deflect or spring your cuts in directions you would never think they could and cause damage to something you never thought it would. Like your channel and you have shown me a thing or two even though I am 63. Great channel
Man as a tradesman I definitely felt your pain on this job. Sometimes things that you think will go easily just don’t. You get flustered and make more mistakes. Most of the time they aren’t any thing too major but just the embarrassment, inconvenience and time wasted. We have all been there. Good thing you’re handy and could change out just the single window pane. I might have been buying them a new window 😢.
He was lucky it was an old window. A double pane would have been a bigger deal because there'd be only one big piece of glass (actually two or more) for the whole sash instead of several small ones like that one had. The whole sash would need to be replaced.
OK John, I am happy to see that you survived your "bucket list" item of doing Evil Knievel stunts from your lift basket. I did similar work in the 1960's 2 summers when I was17 & 18. I did not go up into the trees, I stayed on the ground and sent things up on ropes and I controlled the descent speed of the big tree limbs by wrapping the ropes around the tree trunk and then slowly slacking the rope. We had no lift anything, the owner of the business used tree climbing spikes to get up into the trees. That's why he hired me and sometimes another guy to send things up and bring them back down. Once he was up there he didn't want to come back down and go back up. He never scared me and we never wrecked anything. I really disliked feeding the chipper because it would slap me with the branches and sometimes they'd grab my shirt so hard it ripped it. It was a very powerful chipper with a car 6cylinder engine powering it. Eventually I learned to feed it as I walked past the entrance to the feed chute. You jogged my memory and made me remember to have any kind of altitude work done by a licensed and insured professional. Nice video, thank you. ben/ michigan
I'm getting cold sweats just from watching and imagining the wobbling of the lift, heights is really not my thing, even though I've become used to working with lifts and scaffolding it takes a while to get acclimatized and somewhat comfortable..
- Hey Y’all watch this 😂 - I’d expect this incident to be typical from other you tubers. - Your right, not tethering a line to you or the basket right thing to do. This incident will be one you’ll never forget. Talk about creating exciting content.
The tree grabbed your saw because your back was higher than the apex of your notch and you cut passed your notch turning it into a snap cut. your bar got caught in the keef ot by pass wood. when blocking wood like that either make a notch and leave hinge wood then pull the saw and push it over, or make a proper snap cut, pull the saw and push it over.
On first glance on seeing the first few minutes, I would say that a weather tight hard cover for that panel would help preserve function in my opinion. Eventually water and weather and even temperature sometimes will make things fail.
Single Pane windows! I live in Minnesota so we don't have those anymore. Back in the day I used to glaze a bunch of those. That's maybe the first thing my Dad ever taught me as far as DIY stuff. I remember being proud of how clean I could make the glazing look. Thanks for the chainsaw rebuild. I have a 5 year old 391 that's never let me down. I cut a lot of hard woods so I put it through it's paces. But that 460 is a beast. I can see why it's twice the price of mine. I've owned 3 Stihl chainsaws, getting larger with each purchase. I've got 15-20 years out of each saw. But the residential models are not worth rebuilding, so they're basically throwaways. That 460 is a different story. I'm 62 years old now so I might want to go that big by the time my 391 craps out, but now I'll know the difference.
I do antenna work, mostly on the the rooves of multi-storey buildings. We are absolutely forbidden to use the fall arrest (deceleration) lanyards because to do so, you are kind of admitting that you might fall, and that you need help WHEN you do. What we DO use, is fall restraint (solid webbing) which completely prevents us from getting anywhere near the edge of the roof. If climbing or working from a ladder, we still use 2 very short fall restraint lanyards, which is a bit of a pain because you have to clip on with one, climb, clip off with the other strop, clip it on further up, climb .. ... .... The advantage is that we can only fall as far as it takes for the tightest strop to go tight (maybe 2 or 3ft?). You're probably better off using a solid strop to connect you to the basket, but one that ONLY allows you to stand up, no more. If the basket tries to catapult you, you're going nowhere. The strop should not be long enough to fall or build up momentum, so it should not be long enough for "snap back" situations. If you're REALLY concerned, a better harness would pay dividends. The one you have APPEARS to be what I'd regard as a fall restraint type. It has pretty skinny straps and it is pretty much designed not to fall off your body. You have it strapped to some solid object that prevents you from getting near the edge of anything. If you DO fall in this harness, and you are not rescued quickly, you can suffer a potentially fatal suspension injury where carbon dioxide rich blood is pooled in your limbs (harness acts as a torniquet) and then suddenly released when you are rescued. There are harnesses which are specifically designed to be suspended from which have thicker straps with more padding, and they prevent these types of injuries. With you being based on a farm, potentially some distance from help, it might be worth thinking about. Oh, and get a climbing helmet. A high quality bike helmet would do, but you can get a real climbing helmet for similar prices. All it needs to be is a bit of padded plastic to cover your skull, and it's function is to stop you from being knocked unconsious. Unconsious people don't call for help when suspended.
This reminded me of 44 years ago when I lived in Daphne, Alabama. It was the year that hurricane Frederic came to call, and among the many trees damaged a large pine tree on the property line twisted and "bent" to lay on the roof of our house. It didn't break because it had a diseased section about 10 feet up the trunk. Dad got his big ladder and leaned it against the tree to cut it with his chain saw. As he sawed through the trunk it snapped up as the weight of the top came free, which meant that the ladder no longer had anything to rest against. Dad jumped free of the ladder, simultaneously throwing the chainsaw away from him... only to have it land blade down right between his legs! Miraculously, it missed his legs by inches and was sticking into the ground. It took a few seconds to realize how close he came to a potentially serious accident before we started laughing.
Good job, Jon, just one little pane of glass knocked, but no damage at all to the roof. Good of you to fix the window, I can't think a 'proper' tree surgeon would have done that.
Gees, now I am talking to the video. He asks a question, "Is it moving?" and I holler, "Yes." And it's just me and the cat living here! So I think I better let those important people know. Get the room in the retirement home ready. It won't be long. Thanks John for all your entertainment.
I've learned so much from you over the years that I actuallly thought twice before deciding to correct you 😂 Stihl is a German company so the name wouldnt be pronounced as 'steel' but as 'schtil'. Love the videos Jon, you rock!! Cheers from Europe! ❤
I was going to say, "This is why professionals tie down their saws with special ropes." But you already said this and even showed what kind of ropes and how to use them.
These safety items are a plus. I worked with power company florida power and light. We would not work by our self or without safety lanyards for ourselves or equipment. If tree parts falls on your lift or gets tangled in any part of you it will pull and when it reaches it limits. You will be slingshot out of that lift and hopefully be hanging by your safety gear. And at that time you better hope someone is there to let you down and at top of list knows how to work the lift. Safety-safety-safety.😮😊 because it will happen, like your friend said tis not whether it will happen, it's how many times will it happen. I worked 41-1/2 yrs till I retired. It's always a good thing to be able to say what a good day it was!!!!!
A couple of wedges with some light tethers would keep you from having to use your axe. It would keep your saw from getting stuck and make the tree chunks start going in the right direction.
I suggest a lean-to shed large enough for all your equipment to allow you to store equipment out of direct weather your equip. will thank you and your subscribers will get to enjoy the build videos. Nice job and the extra safety equip is always a good idea especially for all espacially solo operators. I often wonder why original equipment manufacturers in this case JLG do not sell parts that they have original tooling for, at or below prices for what secondary parts companys' who have to copy the originals and keep the repair parts market to themselves. I also use Stilh and think it's inexcusible that Stihl does not offer a rebuild kit for their carbs or at least where to buy advice fir their customers. Ray Stormont
Got to work out of a bucket lift back in December and it was a real hoot. You're right that it's work! I was tired as the day is long by the time I was done, and I'd just been standing in the bucket! The upside is that I got all the limbs down and didn't damage the roof. Unlike you, I thought I could do it without roping anything off, and I was wrong. Had a few pieces hit the roof, but there wasn't any damage, which I'm glad for. I've been watching a ton of arborist videos to learn more about roping, and it's been really fun to think about what I'll do next year when it's time to go back up and finish things. I had to rent a lift for $500, which isn't bad, but time was short and my learning curve was long. As such, I didn't get all the work done. Still, it's something to look forward too, especially if I can find someone that rents a self-driving lift like you've got!
I have that same saw but its called 046 Magnum. It's heavy and is mainly used for blocking up big firewood. Cannot imagine reaching out of a basket and notching the back side of a tree with it! Every time I pick it up, it seems heavier.
What a coincidence, I was just doing a similar job on my farm this past weekend taking down a big dead ash tree with my 50' Genie towable lift. Crazy that one of the things I learned is that I really want to tie my saws off to the basket. I didn't drop mine like you did, but I kept having visions of that happening. Live and learn!!
You know who make the best Millwrights? -- Farmers. Found that out when working with my father to get his new veneer mill up and running, years back. The local farmer that we hired, as millwright, could do every GD thing. Amazing! I Learned a lot from him. Thanks Dough.
That happened to me , we were up 80', the tree was about 90' high. Ii took my brand new De Walt electric pole saw and was cutting overhead. As the branch began to fall it pinched the blade and ripped it right out of my hands and fell 80'. We watched it hit the ground, the pole bounced one way and the battery the other way. It bent the blade a little but it still worked. I am still amazed that it didn't bend the pole or shatter the saw housing or the battery.
Wow that lift is so cool, didn't know they have an axle extend mechanism like that. That is sweet! By the way, glad you had the presence of mind to let go of the saw. Pretty impressive no real damage occurred to it.
I did the opposite of dropping a saw. I had one bound in a tree and talking with ground crew i forgot i hadn't unhooked the lanyard from the boom and boomed down quickly to grab a wedge. Stihl MS250 bent the bar badly i couldn't even unbend it in a vice. Surprised it didn't break the handle or the plastic case on the cheaper MS250. Stihl saws have impressed me a few times. Yours is definitely one of those times!! 60ft and survive Wow. And when cutting close to buildings even with no leafy branches always have to be watching for the PoGo stick effect. Landing on its end and bouncing where you don't want it!! I swear some chunks defy lottery odds to end up where you don't want them to go!!
I have been contemplating buying an 18v Dewalt chainsaw for over a year now. Watching this made my mind up, just ordered it and it will be here tomorrow. Great video as always.
I have both the 16” 20v electric Dewalt and the 60v 18” Dewalt. I like them both, but the 60v has a lot more power - but not as much as a gas saw… it’s quite a bit heavier than the 20v.
When I worked on the farm, the farmer's son ran a tree cutting business(we used the chips in the manure spreader and for stall bedding), and one of his big things was he had lanyards for all of his tools, even hand tools, he used on the boom and for his climbers. Just a run of paracord or nylon with 'biners to attach it to the tool and the bucket. For chainsaws he attached it to the brake lever.
A set of wood dowel sticks the about the thickness of your sawblade, are going to be your friend! When you saw far enough into the stem of the ttree just stick in a piece of of the round dowel, it’s is wood so never bothers your saw and support the heavy block saw further, again a dowel stick. The block is supported on the dowel stick you can completely saw through. Then you can just “roll” of the heavy block.
Now I feel guilty. I watch a lot of tree climbing videos, and I found my self thinking “he should have his saw tied off, I hope he doesn’t drop it”. I’m glad everything worked out.
Climber & cutter who runs saws for a living: always make the second cut LOWER than your fist cut if you are staggering/offsetting your cuts. This will cause the wood to lift off your bar as it breaks free and your saw won’t get ripped from your hands. Second cut higher, as you’ve seen, can sometimes cause problems depending on how the wood breaks free.
Every time I see you up in the basket reminds me of the frist time I operated boom lifts . It was a little bit scary . Given no training what so ever . My foreman asked if I knew how to run one . My answer was how hard could it be ? The first time was a puckering experience to say the least . After a couple of long days it was more fun than being on the ground running a ninety pound jackhammer horizontally . Got really good at maneuvering the basket around to make the job easier . We were doing a major paper mill remodeling project so many of the lifts were 120 feet . Must have spent a total of three and half to four months on those machines . Was just as much fun as riding my motorcycle , which also needs a lot of respect and responsibility each time you mount up . Just remember to take in the views each time you go up .
I frequently turn to TH-cam to learn how to repair things. What I love about your channel is that you taught me how to avoid repairing equipment because you taught me to not bother buying complex equipment on the cheap.
For someone like you that does a lot of work by yourself What you'd need is an electric winch with a remote. sling the winch to the base of the tree, sling a pulley to the main body of the tree, preferably above your working height, and just use remote control to operate the winch. might need to put a quick release hook on the winch so you could release the job with a pull cord once it's on the ground, they are not that expensive (I see them listed under sailing/ships) Quick release hooks on limb work could be handy too. once the branch is hanging off the sling, you could just drop it straight down or release and lower it. One thing I would try also would be to cut a limb while slinged, let it dangle, do the same further down and so on to the base, basically a long chain of limb bits held together by slings. that way the whole limb can be brought closer to the base of the tree with fewer operations. (on the other hand, you'll need more slings, and probably with higher rating as well)
You're going to want to use both the new fall arrest lanyard and a fall restraint. The fall arrest for when you're up in the air (20+ feet or so, you'd have to do your own calculations based on your height and lanyard length) and the restraint for when you're driving in the stowed position or just working under the height at which the arrester would fail to prevent you hitting the ground.
Yes, they make inertial reels that when they start extending quickly, flyweights engage a brake to slow your descent. They were mandatory use when I worked for an oilfield service company. We tested them (and the pipe hanger they attached to) by throwing a 55 gallon drum of water out of the work basket. We had one guy who at worked there for years and was a supervisor and SHOULD have known better not only not connect his harness to the fall arrest device, forgot to close the trap door where the ladder enters the work basket. He stepped backwards out into the hole and fell 40' to his death.
Sorry I seen it coming as your saw falling but you didn't hear me... That was the first thing I said on your first cut you needed a rope on your saw.. More so because you not as stable as on the ground... Glad it mostly worked out well...
I can truly say that this video brought back some very fearful memories for me! I've been in lifts and suspended by a crane, and I've been on ladders. And I've used chainsaws extensively, sometimes in a tree from a ladder. I believe what you did is beyond anything I ever did, because of combining activities! I can offer no criticism, because you did what had to be done, and you were successful. Most recently, I removed about 10 or 12 pine trees averaging 75 feet or so in height, but I had the luxury of doing it all from the ground, since I was clearing an area for a workshop. I used a crossbow and fishing line to pull successively larger ropes over limbs at 50 feet, and dug around them before pulling them over. And one or two didn't go exactly where I wanted them, but the damage was minimal. I normally cut hardwoods for firewood, and I was really surprised how quickly the large pines dulled my chains. Most of what I cut was 18 feet in length - if I had to cut all that into 16" lengths, I would have to find a better method if there is one!
one danger i noticed that you overlooked was at 38:30 ... Try and avoid pulling heavy logs towards yourself on a downwards slope. Be uphill if you need to move them. A overlooked hole / treelimp can make that tricky.
whenever i have had to cut trees down or buck them i now i have a full line of ego + saws with the backpack attached battery they work great have plenty of power.
An arborist showed me what he calls an "offset cut" for topping trees a pice at a time. Cut horizontally from the side where you want the chunk to fall. Cut 1 inch pass the center. Then from the opposite side, cut horizontally but one inch higher again just pass the center. This leaves a small "hinge" connected. Put the saw down, and manually push the chunk breaking the hinge and it goes in the direction you want with no surprises.
When I was young I was working in ABB high voltage laboratory in Stockholm. We had a lift to use to get to the ceiling, it just went straight up. It was the most terrifying experience I had..
I had my heart in my mouth watching this. It's tense enough to observe I don't envy you up that lift with branching jumping around over someone's house.
Thank you so much for letting us learn with you!! I have to cut down a big oak tree this winter and have to cut several branches upfront. So this episode came to the perfect time and I I surely have noticed some good hints that will make the job at least safer if not easier. Very entertaining as well. Please keep up the awesome youtube work!!! Stay safe!
I admire your work ethic and general "good guy persona" but I showed this vid to my team as an example of what not to do in regards to following basic bucket lift safety procedures.
Had you made the back cut below the hinge the saw would have stayed with the tree (the holding wood). Because the back cut was above the hinge, when it triggered the saw when with the wood.
New subscriber here oct 2024. You sir are da man! Better than any Hollywood series I’ve ever watched. Thanks for showing the American at work. Inspirational PS. I hope you make a bazillion dollars from TH-cam.
I can't say I "like" watching someone risk their own safety in this tree work, but this work removed a great deal of risk of damage and injury from the homeowner and thier house.
What you really need is a self retracting lanyard. If you fall out of the basket with the lanyard you showed in the video, you will fall 6’ then another 3’ as the webbing unzips. A self retracting lanyard will stop you from falling out of the basket entirely (unless it’s in really slow motion lol). It will arrest your fall within 3”. It’s like a seat belt. Much safer for AWP work.
Hats off to you, Jon. I was getting queasy just seeing how high up you were in that basket. Heights and such make me a bit more nervous than a cat in a dog run. You should see me on a Ferris wheel. Some people carve their initials into the centre posts of the gondola but I actually melt the metal and leave my fingerprints embedded in the stainless steel. Well, maybe a little exaggeration there, but you get the gist. Enjoyed the video and that window just wanted to keep you humble.
I like to make my own anti-seize compound by mixing dry graphite powder with a 30 w or 20 w non-detergent motor oil. If I need a high temperature anti-seize compound, I use water instead of the oil. Sure makes things easier to come apart when you want them to. Kind of dirty though but not too bad as long as one uses just enough to coat the parts one needs. Great video John thumbs up.
Sorry, but I learnt all I need about cutting off limbs by watching The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, although I'm not sure if the method varies from state to state.
Another great video Jon, Your a master of camera angles. I’m not an arborist but have a couple in the family I’ve helped. Usually on a big pine or spruce when there’s a nice drop zone they’ll limb it up from the bottom then top it and snap cut down in manageable chunks. Takes out a bunch of variables.
Come for the excellent tree trimming, stay for the carburetor replacement! If I know I'm keeping a small engine tool for more than a decade, I buy a second carburetor, etc., and store those parts near where I keep the tool.
Well done , you could see as the video was going on you were cutting the pieces bigger and bigger , eager to get done , but at least you caused only minimal damage that you were able to fix by yourself , every day is a school day and you learned a couple of lessons that day , it seems you’re fearless when tackling jobs , sometimes it ok to say no I’m not doing that one , nobody wants to see you getting hurt or worse for video content , the repair stuff you do are my favourite, take care and regards Davy 🏴🇹🇭
9/22/23; another great video Jon; yur 80ft boom lift looks/works great! Re: lowering/rigging big limbs over house/roof etc, check out August Heinike (Oregon) climber & YT producer. He makes & sells several items you may like, especially his Speed Line Kit for lowering (at ~45° angle) branches, like you were doing. Very nifty for safely strapping targeted branch(s) before cutting, then (caribiner) clipping one of his multi colored straps to angled guide line before cutting. Angled line is anchored to heavy ground item so cut branch just slides down to ground avoiding roof/fence etc. No need to man handle big branch from your elevated position. Your handy ground lady (& camera person) can simply un-clip (caribiner) the colored strap & wait for your next branch. Hope you & boss lady will enjoy seeing this kit, a 'pouch- belt' of 10-12 colored straps/caribiners dangling from climbers harness (or you up in basket) then quickly loop-strap around branch, cut & just let go...had to mention this to you as you were handling heavy branch sooo close to customers house when...oops...glad it was just a small glass...& not a (7 year) mirror damage🤔 you have enough maintenance issues without that curse of breaking a mirror!LoL, always watch & enjoy your videos!👍👍💪🍷😊
I was takeing out trees for my mother. We had a line on it and I wish I had put the 4weeler on it. The tree fell perfectly backwards missing the wraparound deck by inches. Thankfully the only damage was a cheap umbrella. Side note I also dropped 8 trees less than 3in in quick secession on a 90 degree day on a steep grade. As soon as I sat down I almost passed out. Take more breaks than you think you need people.
Your friends are lucky to have you. And thankfully you did dodge a couple bullets. Keep that Sthil going as long as you can. The new ones aren’t made as well.
Big thank you to Ethos for partnering with me. You can get a personalized insurance quote in 10 minutes for as low as $10/mo by using my code here: bit.ly/farmcraft101-ethos. Have an awesome weekend everybody!
My left knee had a 3" scar pretty much like yours but the coco butter has reduced the scar too 1 1/2 inches. Just apply it often, it really works.
😀
This is not good advice, use a licenced ,regulated advisor.
kind of foolish to be doing tree work without a hard hat, one of those dead little branches just 10 feet above your head could kill you.
After you cut the wedge out and after you start doing the final cut you need to use wedges, to both manipulate the tree and have some clearance so your saw doesn't get jammed
The homeowner wanted more light. You provided them with more ventilation for free. That's what I call customer service! 😁
LOL! Service with a smile! 😅
That’s way too funny 😁
LMAO
Your multi angle, multi camera cinematography beats Hollywood, keeping in mind that you are actually doing hard work along with making excellent video.
Yeap. The videos are GREAT.
yeah drones and the numerous go-pro's and proper microphones and tri-pods are hella expensive
then there is the editing, a beefy PC and a suite that lets you easily overlay text and adjust speed for timelapses can't be easy
farmcraft, diesel creek, AVE, and several others are providing content that holywood would not bother with, yet are doing it at nearly holywood quality
these dudes have a passion, and decided that showing good shots of how they do what they do was a value to society
hell I bet a lot of people would directly pay these guys for help, because heavy equipment is tough to fix and maintain, yet is still something normal people may need to interact with someday
"My wife's chainsaw" awesome 😊
You can tell the good youtubers because they even post their mess-ups, instead of trying to appear perfect every time in falsehood
Arborist here, the main problem is that you are not lining up your back-cut with the hinge. Hard to see accurately on video obviously, but it looks like your back-cut was quite severly above your hinge when the saw got grabbed, which is a big no-no. Sometimes it's appropriate to back cut slightly (about half an inch) below the hinge, but never cut above it.
Regarding the window trick-shot. Even limbs that are too short to reach something fragile from their landing spot can, given enough drop velocity, flex like a bow when landing on their tip and absolutely launch themselves like a vaulting pole. Always be extra careful when dropping, and preferably use a cut technique that drops the wood flat, rather than droop-n-drop.
Love your content, and sorry for my lack of skill in the English language :)
Thanks for showing all, including messups, you learn much from them. Glad that this was one simple glass to replace, not some whole window.
"Ask me how I know" )) The same stuff. MS 361, left knee, 8 stitches. 1 month recovery. 30 minutes before that I took off my protective pants (because of heat). Safety rules are written in blood )) Always a pleasure to watch your videos. Like from a father I've never had. Thanks man and keep up a good job! ))
And yes - I've seen your video where you stressed on having the protective pants on, but at some point I was like "Oh, what can even happen? I'm finishing my job here. 7 hours without an incident" and then MS 361 "explained" me )))
Lesson learned (the hard way).
59:59 those Stihl saws have a flexible rubber boot between the cylinder and carb mount, they can get flex cracks in them causing a slight intake leak which causes a lean condition at idle, causing a stall
Sounds like just the sort of thing they could be caused by a shock, like maybe dropping the saw? 😆
With your narration, multiple camera angles, and the way you keep it very interesting, your videos are always great and better than most of what Hollywood puts out. Thanks for the videos John and keep them coming!
Oh, and a damn good job clearing the trees and limbs.
Remember folks, You get what you pay for!
Lol, love ya Jon!
I spent the entirety of my youth working around trees cutting and chainsaws. Mostly with my family cutting firewood for sale, but in High School I worked for a tree trimming company for 3 years. You done did good work. The only damage I every really saw was almost identical to your broken window. Limb lands just perfect and launches like a spring. That guy was a damn good saw man in the bucket and out of it. It happens to everyone sometimes. Still did a lot of good work for your friend with no real issues that weren't easily fixed.
Man, remind me to never take for granted the newer lifts where you just hit a button while you drive the lift to extend and retract the axles...
Great video as always!
Thanks Jennifer for helping with the camera work, this video was amazing!
Would love to know a little more about your background. E.g. where'd you learn all these things, have you always been around farms, any odd jobs you've had, etc? I'm sure you've got plenty of good stories.
Love your videos. Perfect for unwinding on Friday. Thank you!
Hi Jon, safety first and to infinity, I mean who are we going to watch on a Friday afternoon?? Seriously you are to good to not have around for your family and your viewers. Many thanks from UK.
48:40 if only there were some wooden shutters that they could have closed first to protect the windows… 🤔
Heh, I guess we could have all seen the possibility there but been more interested in getting the job over with. And the cost of paying ground crew is way more than a pane of glass. I’d just be happy that the tree guy went home intact
Any man who has a wife that has a chainsaw of her own, chose wisely. Love the channel.
19:53 Your camera shot of the topping was great. At 35:01 I see the Why this video turned out so well, it was the head camera person expertise.
Your Dam project and this tree work were great content and I hope a nice supplement to a farmers income.
"Hello. Welcome back to FarmCraft. I am John and this behind me is my Johns... my boomlift." 😄
I would recommend a self retracting lanyard for boom lift work ( they are now the industry standard) because not only will they soften your fall like your fixed lanyard, but they act like a seat belt and may prevent you from being ejected from the basket in the first place (once you are ejected and take a 6 ft fall it is difficult to self rescue). I Iove the channel and all of your content (even if it makes me jealous haha).
I was thinking the same thing. Self retracting lanyards are not that expensive and easy to work in.
The requirement where I was employed was 100% tie off if you're in it for any reason. Good call on the retracter. Check out the videos of people getting thrown out of lifts unloading them. I don't want to bring you bad luck, but you need to unload the lift as in sell it.
I cut trees from a lift as well, though not for a career. Couple possibilities: 1. Have someone with you in the basket. They can hold branches and keep them from whacking you or dropping where you don't want them. No putting the saw down after every cut either. It's a game changer. 2. Cut the lower limbs off first and work up the tree. Limbs then fall right around the base of the tree without hitting and bouncing off stuff. Can't do that if the tree is so rotten that stuff would fall off from above.
Love watching you work!
Chainsaw is german quality ;) In germany, such kind of treework is only allowed by special trained people. And only with a lot of body protection like helmet, protection for body and legs, etc.. I do a lot of cutting wood at home, but I would never climp up on a tree which I will cut down or use a boom lift. Great work and respect that you do such dangerous jobs!
Yeah, y'all love rules.
I would argue that he is trained, just not certified/licensed. Sad day for the paperwork monkeys, but thats about it.
In Germany you must ask permission to blow your nose, I'm shocked the German people haven't revolted yet.
Always, Always, Always cut your lower limbs first. It will let your upper cuts drop straight down or you can direct your higher cuts better and safer. lower limbs left on can deflect or spring your cuts in directions you would never think they could and cause damage to something you never thought it would. Like your channel and you have shown me a thing or two even though I am 63. Great channel
Hats off to you, sir, I am a adrenaline junkie myself and you are hanging on the edge with a smile
I think it's his rock climbing experience.
I just knew you hand the knowledge to replace that broken glass lol. Please never stop making videos good sir!
Man as a tradesman I definitely felt your pain on this job. Sometimes things that you think will go easily just don’t. You get flustered and make more mistakes. Most of the time they aren’t any thing too major but just the embarrassment, inconvenience and time wasted. We have all been there. Good thing you’re handy and could change out just the single window pane. I might have been buying them a new window 😢.
He was lucky it was an old window. A double pane would have been a bigger deal because there'd be only one big piece of glass (actually two or more) for the whole sash instead of several small ones like that one had. The whole sash would need to be replaced.
OK John, I am happy to see that you survived your "bucket list" item of doing Evil Knievel stunts from your lift basket. I did similar work in the 1960's 2 summers when I was17 & 18. I did not go up into the trees, I stayed on the ground and sent things up on ropes and I controlled the descent speed of the big tree limbs by wrapping the ropes around the tree trunk and then slowly slacking the rope. We had no lift anything, the owner of the business used tree climbing spikes to get up into the trees. That's why he hired me and sometimes another guy to send things up and bring them back down. Once he was up there he didn't want to come back down and go back up. He never scared me and we never wrecked anything. I really disliked feeding the chipper because it would slap me with the branches and sometimes they'd grab my shirt so hard it ripped it. It was a very powerful chipper with a car 6cylinder engine powering it. Eventually I learned to feed it as I walked past the entrance to the feed chute. You jogged my memory and made me remember to have any kind of altitude work done by a licensed and insured professional. Nice video, thank you. ben/ michigan
I'm getting cold sweats just from watching and imagining the wobbling of the lift, heights is really not my thing, even though I've become used to working with lifts and scaffolding it takes a while to get acclimatized and somewhat comfortable..
every day a farmcraft video comes out is a good day! Saved my week! Nice Job!
- Hey Y’all watch this 😂
- I’d expect this incident to be typical from other you tubers.
- Your right, not tethering a line to you or the basket right thing to do. This incident will be one you’ll never forget. Talk about creating exciting content.
The tree grabbed your saw because your back was higher than the apex of your notch and you cut passed your notch turning it into a snap cut. your bar got caught in the keef ot by pass wood. when blocking wood like that either make a notch and leave hinge wood then pull the saw and push it over, or make a proper snap cut, pull the saw and push it over.
On first glance on seeing the first few minutes, I would say that a weather tight hard cover for that panel would help preserve function in my opinion. Eventually water and weather and even temperature sometimes will make things fail.
Those fall restraints are akin to a parachute that opens on impact.
Another great episode. Farm craft101 is truly a WINDOW Into The World of the life of a farmer haha.
Life of a deceased person in the making, perhaps.
Single Pane windows! I live in Minnesota so we don't have those anymore. Back in the day I used to glaze a bunch of those. That's maybe the first thing my Dad ever taught me as far as DIY stuff. I remember being proud of how clean I could make the glazing look.
Thanks for the chainsaw rebuild. I have a 5 year old 391 that's never let me down. I cut a lot of hard woods so I put it through it's paces. But that 460 is a beast. I can see why it's twice the price of mine. I've owned 3 Stihl chainsaws, getting larger with each purchase. I've got 15-20 years out of each saw. But the residential models are not worth rebuilding, so they're basically throwaways. That 460 is a different story. I'm 62 years old now so I might want to go that big by the time my 391 craps out, but now I'll know the difference.
I do antenna work, mostly on the the rooves of multi-storey buildings.
We are absolutely forbidden to use the fall arrest (deceleration) lanyards because to do so, you are kind of admitting that you might fall, and that you need help WHEN you do.
What we DO use, is fall restraint (solid webbing) which completely prevents us from getting anywhere near the edge of the roof. If climbing or working from a ladder, we still use 2 very short fall restraint lanyards, which is a bit of a pain because you have to clip on with one, climb, clip off with the other strop, clip it on further up, climb .. ... ....
The advantage is that we can only fall as far as it takes for the tightest strop to go tight (maybe 2 or 3ft?).
You're probably better off using a solid strop to connect you to the basket, but one that ONLY allows you to stand up, no more. If the basket tries to catapult you, you're going nowhere. The strop should not be long enough to fall or build up momentum, so it should not be long enough for "snap back" situations.
If you're REALLY concerned, a better harness would pay dividends.
The one you have APPEARS to be what I'd regard as a fall restraint type. It has pretty skinny straps and it is pretty much designed not to fall off your body. You have it strapped to some solid object that prevents you from getting near the edge of anything.
If you DO fall in this harness, and you are not rescued quickly, you can suffer a potentially fatal suspension injury where carbon dioxide rich blood is pooled in your limbs (harness acts as a torniquet) and then suddenly released when you are rescued.
There are harnesses which are specifically designed to be suspended from which have thicker straps with more padding, and they prevent these types of injuries. With you being based on a farm, potentially some distance from help, it might be worth thinking about.
Oh, and get a climbing helmet. A high quality bike helmet would do, but you can get a real climbing helmet for similar prices. All it needs to be is a bit of padded plastic to cover your skull, and it's function is to stop you from being knocked unconsious. Unconsious people don't call for help when suspended.
That little dewalt 20v Chainsaw seems to be a good little saw Nice for small limb work what a little champ 41:41 @FarmCraft101
This reminded me of 44 years ago when I lived in Daphne, Alabama. It was the year that hurricane Frederic came to call, and among the many trees damaged a large pine tree on the property line twisted and "bent" to lay on the roof of our house. It didn't break because it had a diseased section about 10 feet up the trunk. Dad got his big ladder and leaned it against the tree to cut it with his chain saw. As he sawed through the trunk it snapped up as the weight of the top came free, which meant that the ladder no longer had anything to rest against. Dad jumped free of the ladder, simultaneously throwing the chainsaw away from him... only to have it land blade down right between his legs! Miraculously, it missed his legs by inches and was sticking into the ground. It took a few seconds to realize how close he came to a potentially serious accident before we started laughing.
Good job, Jon, just one little pane of glass knocked, but no damage at all to the roof. Good of you to fix the window, I can't think a 'proper' tree surgeon would have done that.
Tree guy would have kept the tree out of the house… that’s kind of the entire point
@@chappo8100 Can't assume tree guys don't make mistakes- that's why they have insurance.
Gees, now I am talking to the video. He asks a question, "Is it moving?" and I holler, "Yes." And it's just me and the cat living here! So I think I better let those important people know. Get the room in the retirement home ready. It won't be long. Thanks John for all your entertainment.
You’re lonely, see your friends
No worries. i do that too. Jon is getting us trained. 😉
I've learned so much from you over the years that I actuallly thought twice before deciding to correct you 😂 Stihl is a German company so the name wouldnt be pronounced as 'steel' but as 'schtil'. Love the videos Jon, you rock!! Cheers from Europe! ❤
I was going to say, "This is why professionals tie down their saws with special ropes." But you already said this and even showed what kind of ropes and how to use them.
These safety items are a plus. I worked with power company florida power and light. We would not work by our self or without safety lanyards for ourselves or equipment. If tree parts falls on your lift or gets tangled in any part of you it will pull and when it reaches it limits. You will be slingshot out of that lift and hopefully be hanging by your safety gear. And at that time you better hope someone is there to let you down and at top of list knows how to work the lift. Safety-safety-safety.😮😊 because it will happen, like your friend said tis not whether it will happen, it's how many times will it happen. I worked 41-1/2 yrs till I retired. It's always a good thing to be able to say what a good day it was!!!!!
Even tho I don't have a boom lift, I always learn a lot from your videos..ty Sir
A couple of wedges with some light tethers would keep you from having to use your axe. It would keep your saw from getting stuck and make the tree chunks start going in the right direction.
I suggest a lean-to shed large enough for all your equipment to allow you to store equipment out of direct weather your equip. will thank you and your subscribers will get to enjoy the build videos. Nice job and the extra safety equip is always a good idea especially for all espacially solo operators. I often wonder why original equipment manufacturers in this case JLG do not sell parts that they have original tooling for, at or below prices for what secondary parts companys' who have to copy the originals and keep the repair parts market to themselves. I also use Stilh and think it's inexcusible that Stihl does not offer a rebuild kit for their carbs or at least where to buy advice fir their customers. Ray Stormont
Got to work out of a bucket lift back in December and it was a real hoot. You're right that it's work! I was tired as the day is long by the time I was done, and I'd just been standing in the bucket! The upside is that I got all the limbs down and didn't damage the roof. Unlike you, I thought I could do it without roping anything off, and I was wrong. Had a few pieces hit the roof, but there wasn't any damage, which I'm glad for. I've been watching a ton of arborist videos to learn more about roping, and it's been really fun to think about what I'll do next year when it's time to go back up and finish things. I had to rent a lift for $500, which isn't bad, but time was short and my learning curve was long. As such, I didn't get all the work done. Still, it's something to look forward too, especially if I can find someone that rents a self-driving lift like you've got!
I have that same saw but its called 046 Magnum.
It's heavy and is mainly used for blocking up big firewood.
Cannot imagine reaching out of a basket and notching the back side of a tree with it!
Every time I pick it up,
it seems heavier.
What a coincidence, I was just doing a similar job on my farm this past weekend taking down a big dead ash tree with my 50' Genie towable lift. Crazy that one of the things I learned is that I really want to tie my saws off to the basket. I didn't drop mine like you did, but I kept having visions of that happening. Live and learn!!
You know who make the best Millwrights? -- Farmers. Found that out when working with my father to get his new veneer mill up and running, years back. The local farmer that we hired, as millwright, could do every GD thing. Amazing! I Learned a lot from him. Thanks Dough.
That happened to me , we were up 80', the tree was about 90' high. Ii took my brand new De Walt electric pole saw and was cutting overhead. As the branch began to fall it pinched the blade and ripped it right out of my hands and fell 80'. We watched it hit the ground, the pole bounced one way and the battery the other way. It bent the blade a little but it still worked. I am still amazed that it didn't bend the pole or shatter the saw housing or the battery.
Big job to tackle solo John. The conclusion I have is that you just love hard work. Can’t wait for the next one. 🔧👍🇬🇧
Wow that lift is so cool, didn't know they have an axle extend mechanism like that. That is sweet! By the way, glad you had the presence of mind to let go of the saw. Pretty impressive no real damage occurred to it.
Listen Bud,you never make mistake when you are doing nothing,so keep on going and have fun at it.
I did the opposite of dropping a saw. I had one bound in a tree and talking with ground crew i forgot i hadn't unhooked the lanyard from the boom and boomed down quickly to grab a wedge. Stihl MS250 bent the bar badly i couldn't even unbend it in a vice. Surprised it didn't break the handle or the plastic case on the cheaper MS250. Stihl saws have impressed me a few times. Yours is definitely one of those times!! 60ft and survive Wow.
And when cutting close to buildings even with no leafy branches always have to be watching for the PoGo stick effect. Landing on its end and bouncing where you don't want it!! I swear some chunks defy lottery odds to end up where you don't want them to go!!
I have been contemplating buying an 18v Dewalt chainsaw for over a year now.
Watching this made my mind up, just ordered it and it will be here tomorrow. Great video as always.
It's pretty decent. Not as much power as my gas saws, but what can you expect? And I already had the dewalt batteries.
@@FarmCraft101 yep. I have more batteries than I can carry, + I always charge them on-site if I can: #free fuel.
I have both the 16” 20v electric Dewalt and the 60v 18” Dewalt. I like them both, but the 60v has a lot more power - but not as much as a gas saw… it’s quite a bit heavier than the 20v.
When I worked on the farm, the farmer's son ran a tree cutting business(we used the chips in the manure spreader and for stall bedding), and one of his big things was he had lanyards for all of his tools, even hand tools, he used on the boom and for his climbers. Just a run of paracord or nylon with 'biners to attach it to the tool and the bucket. For chainsaws he attached it to the brake lever.
Looks good nothing broke. From the fall very nice Stihl Super Impressive 58:36 @FarmCraft101
Omg the tree Took your Stihl Saw with it holy crap Jon 20:20 60 foot drop I would be suprised if that saw survived that fall 😳 @FarmCraft101
A set of wood dowel sticks the about the thickness of your sawblade, are going to be your friend! When you saw far enough into the stem of the ttree just stick in a piece of of the round dowel, it’s is wood so never bothers your saw and support the heavy block saw further, again a dowel stick. The block is supported on the dowel stick you can completely saw through. Then you can just “roll” of the heavy block.
ms460, probably one of the best chainsaws Stihl made!
Now I feel guilty. I watch a lot of tree climbing videos, and I found my self thinking “he should have his saw tied off, I hope he doesn’t drop it”. I’m glad everything worked out.
Very nice tree felling Jon 17:20 super nice angles @FarmCraft101
Climber & cutter who runs saws for a living: always make the second cut LOWER than your fist cut if you are staggering/offsetting your cuts.
This will cause the wood to lift off your bar as it breaks free and your saw won’t get ripped from your hands. Second cut higher, as you’ve seen, can sometimes cause problems depending on how the wood breaks free.
Once again you taught us not all things are doable by everyone. HAVE A GREAT DAY
Every time I see you up in the basket reminds me of the frist time I operated boom lifts .
It was a little bit scary .
Given no training what so ever . My foreman asked if I knew how to run one . My answer was how hard could it be ? The first time was a puckering experience to say the least .
After a couple of long days it was more fun than being on the ground running a ninety pound jackhammer horizontally . Got really good at maneuvering the basket around to make the job easier .
We were doing a major paper mill remodeling project so many of the lifts were 120 feet .
Must have spent a total of three and half to four months on those machines . Was just as much fun as riding my motorcycle , which also needs a lot of respect and responsibility each time you mount up .
Just remember to take in the views each time you go up .
Wow..The amount of time you spend _not_ farming but fixing the equipment is just incredible to this dairy farmer.
51.23 Love the camo job you did on your lift now the tree's wont see you coming.
I frequently turn to TH-cam to learn how to repair things. What I love about your channel is that you taught me how to avoid repairing equipment because you taught me to not bother buying complex equipment on the cheap.
I am stunned at how productive this man is...
For someone like you that does a lot of work by yourself
What you'd need is an electric winch with a remote. sling the winch to the base of the tree, sling a pulley to the main body of the tree, preferably above your working height, and just use remote control to operate the winch. might need to put a quick release hook on the winch so you could release the job with a pull cord once it's on the ground, they are not that expensive (I see them listed under sailing/ships)
Quick release hooks on limb work could be handy too. once the branch is hanging off the sling, you could just drop it straight down or release and lower it.
One thing I would try also would be to cut a limb while slinged, let it dangle, do the same further down and so on to the base, basically a long chain of limb bits held together by slings. that way the whole limb can be brought closer to the base of the tree with fewer operations. (on the other hand, you'll need more slings, and probably with higher rating as well)
Drove footage is Premium that is one super tall tree maxed out the boom already dang 😳 the audience is funny especially the kids 🤣 16:00 @FarmCraft101
You're going to want to use both the new fall arrest lanyard and a fall restraint. The fall arrest for when you're up in the air (20+ feet or so, you'd have to do your own calculations based on your height and lanyard length) and the restraint for when you're driving in the stowed position or just working under the height at which the arrester would fail to prevent you hitting the ground.
Yes, they make inertial reels that when they start extending quickly, flyweights engage a brake to slow your descent. They were mandatory use when I worked for an oilfield service company. We tested them (and the pipe hanger they attached to) by throwing a 55 gallon drum of water out of the work basket. We had one guy who at worked there for years and was a supervisor and SHOULD have known better not only not connect his harness to the fall arrest device, forgot to close the trap door where the ladder enters the work basket. He stepped backwards out into the hole and fell 40' to his death.
Sorry I seen it coming as your saw falling but you didn't hear me... That was the first thing I said on your first cut you needed a rope on your saw.. More so because you not as stable as on the ground... Glad it mostly worked out well...
Days gone by, local code OSHA did not require tie offs while driving due to people getting thrown and hung…
I can truly say that this video brought back some very fearful memories for me! I've been in lifts and suspended by a crane, and I've been on ladders. And I've used chainsaws extensively, sometimes in a tree from a ladder. I believe what you did is beyond anything I ever did, because of combining activities! I can offer no criticism, because you did what had to be done, and you were successful. Most recently, I removed about 10 or 12 pine trees averaging 75 feet or so in height, but I had the luxury of doing it all from the ground, since I was clearing an area for a workshop. I used a crossbow and fishing line to pull successively larger ropes over limbs at 50 feet, and dug around them before pulling them over. And one or two didn't go exactly where I wanted them, but the damage was minimal. I normally cut hardwoods for firewood, and I was really surprised how quickly the large pines dulled my chains. Most of what I cut was 18 feet in length - if I had to cut all that into 16" lengths, I would have to find a better method if there is one!
one danger i noticed that you overlooked was at 38:30 ... Try and avoid pulling heavy logs towards yourself on a downwards slope. Be uphill if you need to move them. A overlooked hole / treelimp can make that tricky.
whenever i have had to cut trees down or buck them i now i have a full line of ego + saws with the backpack attached battery they work great have plenty of power.
An arborist showed me what he calls an "offset cut" for topping trees a pice at a time. Cut horizontally from the side where you want the chunk to fall. Cut 1 inch pass the center.
Then from the opposite side, cut horizontally but one inch higher again just pass the center.
This leaves a small "hinge" connected. Put the saw down, and manually push the chunk breaking the hinge and it goes in the direction you want with no surprises.
When I was young I was working in ABB high voltage laboratory in Stockholm. We had a lift to use to get to the ceiling, it just went straight up. It was the most terrifying experience I had..
I had my heart in my mouth watching this. It's tense enough to observe I don't envy you up that lift with branching jumping around over someone's house.
Thank you so much for letting us learn with you!! I have to cut down a big oak tree this winter and have to cut several branches upfront. So this episode came to the perfect time and I I surely have noticed some good hints that will make the job at least safer if not easier. Very entertaining as well. Please keep up the awesome youtube work!!! Stay safe!
I admire your work ethic and general "good guy persona" but I showed this vid to my team as an example of what not to do in regards to following basic bucket lift safety procedures.
Another awesome video - but the real win was not making us wait on the carb rebuild kit. Small, but greatly appreciated!
Had you made the back cut below the hinge the saw would have stayed with the tree (the holding wood). Because the back cut was above the hinge, when it triggered the saw when with the wood.
New subscriber here oct 2024. You sir are da man! Better than any Hollywood series I’ve ever watched. Thanks for showing the American at work. Inspirational
PS. I hope you make a bazillion dollars from TH-cam.
After your saw took its flying leap, it didn't seem like it was idling correctly. Fantastic bit of tree removal.
I can't say I "like" watching someone risk their own safety in this tree work, but this work removed a great deal of risk of damage and injury from the homeowner and thier house.
What you really need is a self retracting lanyard. If you fall out of the basket with the lanyard you showed in the video, you will fall 6’ then another 3’ as the webbing unzips. A self retracting lanyard will stop you from falling out of the basket entirely (unless it’s in really slow motion lol). It will arrest your fall within 3”. It’s like a seat belt. Much safer for AWP work.
Hats off to you, Jon. I was getting queasy just seeing how high up you were in that basket. Heights and such make me a bit more nervous than a cat in a dog run. You should see me on a Ferris wheel. Some people carve their initials into the centre posts of the gondola but I actually melt the metal and leave my fingerprints embedded in the stainless steel. Well, maybe a little exaggeration there, but you get the gist. Enjoyed the video and that window just wanted to keep you humble.
I like to make my own anti-seize compound by mixing dry graphite powder with a 30 w or 20 w non-detergent motor oil. If I need a high temperature anti-seize compound, I use water instead of the oil. Sure makes things easier to come apart when you want them to. Kind of dirty though but not too bad as long as one uses just enough to coat the parts one needs. Great video John thumbs up.
Sorry, but I learnt all I need about cutting off limbs by watching The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, although I'm not sure if the method varies from state to state.
So glad to see someone else visits Struggletown regularly! Makes me feel better really- another great video!
Another great video Jon,
Your a master of camera angles.
I’m not an arborist but have a couple in the family I’ve helped.
Usually on a big pine or spruce when there’s a nice drop zone they’ll limb it up from the bottom then top it and snap cut down in manageable chunks. Takes out a bunch of variables.
Come for the excellent tree trimming, stay for the carburetor replacement!
If I know I'm keeping a small engine tool for more than a decade, I buy a second carburetor, etc., and store those parts near where I keep the tool.
Pretty simple design to retract and extend the width other then the bent pin very neet Jon 6:15 @FarmCraft101
Well done , you could see as the video was going on you were cutting the pieces bigger and bigger , eager to get done , but at least you caused only minimal damage that you were able to fix by yourself , every day is a school day and you learned a couple of lessons that day , it seems you’re fearless when tackling jobs , sometimes it ok to say no I’m not doing that one , nobody wants to see you getting hurt or worse for video content , the repair stuff you do are my favourite, take care and regards Davy 🏴🇹🇭
9/22/23; another great video Jon; yur 80ft boom lift looks/works great!
Re: lowering/rigging big limbs over house/roof etc, check out August Heinike (Oregon) climber & YT producer. He makes & sells several items you may like, especially his Speed Line Kit for lowering (at ~45° angle) branches, like you were doing. Very nifty for safely strapping targeted branch(s) before cutting, then (caribiner) clipping one of his multi colored straps to angled guide line before cutting. Angled line is anchored to heavy ground item so cut branch just slides down to ground avoiding roof/fence etc. No need to man handle big branch from your elevated position. Your handy ground lady (& camera person) can simply un-clip (caribiner) the colored strap & wait for your next branch. Hope you & boss lady will enjoy seeing this kit, a 'pouch- belt' of 10-12 colored straps/caribiners dangling from climbers harness (or you up in basket) then quickly loop-strap around branch, cut & just let go...had to mention this to you as you were handling heavy branch sooo close to customers house when...oops...glad it was just a small glass...& not a (7 year) mirror damage🤔 you have enough maintenance issues without that curse of breaking a mirror!LoL, always watch & enjoy your videos!👍👍💪🍷😊
I was takeing out trees for my mother. We had a line on it and I wish I had put the 4weeler on it. The tree fell perfectly backwards missing the wraparound deck by inches. Thankfully the only damage was a cheap umbrella.
Side note I also dropped 8 trees less than 3in in quick secession on a 90 degree day on a steep grade. As soon as I sat down I almost passed out. Take more breaks than you think you need people.
Your friends are lucky to have you. And thankfully you did dodge a couple bullets. Keep that Sthil going as long as you can. The new ones aren’t made as well.
LOL "your not use to having an audience? " LOL what are we chopped liver. :)