This past weekend, I cut a couple of white birches that were heavily leaning into a field.
The first was about 20" at the stump. The top 1/3rd of the tree was dead. I did a face cut and a plunge cut in the back leaving a 2" anchor on the backside to hold the tree and to prevent a barber chair. That tree went down perfectly as planned.
The second one which was completely dead but still solid... well that didn't go as quite as planned. This one was only about 16" at the stump. I got the face cut done and went with the same method of the plunge cut with a rear anchor. I started my plunge about 2" higher than the corner of my hinge and about 3" back from it, I was cutting back toward my anchor point with a plan to leave 2" of anchor. Just before I got to that mark BOOM, the rear anchor ripped out and the tree snapped off the 3" of remaining hinge.
Luckily there was no barber chair that this method is supposed to prevent and it fell and landed just as I had planned. However, there was no cracking sound or any other warning that the tree was ready to fall. It scared the shit out of me as I barely had time to take a step back from the tree as it let go.
Looking back, with the tree being fully dead, the fibers in the tree had started to break down. This had weakened them to the point where I needed to leave a thicker rear anchor that wouldn't have ripped out. Or maybe I should have used a different felling method like this one that is used for softer trees...
Last edited by From_the_NEK; 08-27-2019 at 10:17 AM.
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Aim for the chopping block. If you aim for the wood, you will have nothing. Aim past the wood, aim through the wood.</p>
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