Windblown
Bronze Member
Did you catch the action on the trail cam?
I understand rural. When we picked up this place about 10-15 years ago we were told that in about 4,000 acres area that we increased the population significantly - up to a total of 1 dozen (yes, 12). I think since COVID we are probably at ~20. We tell folks we aren't out in the middle of nowhere - that honor goes to our barn, but we can see the barn from our front porch!Thanks. My tractor has 9' of lift ht. And ~2700 lbs at pins...the current 'top' is right around that height. I've got a 3500lb winch on the SxS. The trick is my moral aversion to getting on someone else's land. The chicken farm that leases the land left of the corner at least has staff on premises. They may even help? This is a very rural area. They do have Great Pyrenees at least as big as my Anatolians...that one in the pic is 1 y/o and 91 lbs. Her sister is 99. Point being, I don't relish being set upon by their big boy or his gf.
If I can get over there, cutting from the tree top in sections would be easy enough, especially if I drop the fence. The lazy in me is going to sit back and figure out the best way with the least work. (Without hurting myself) Fortunately, time is something I have in abundance (unless I don't and then it doesn't matter anymore).
It should be a simple extraction. Cut off the limbs near the stump as high as you can reach while the treetop still supports the weight. Then start cutting the top in pieces and work your way back, cutting small pieces at a time. Small blocks at a time is all it takes.We had a pretty bad storm come through Sunday night/Monday morning. Lots of downed branches and trees. A guy not far from here was killed by one falling on his mobile home.
We avoided any really bad problems, but lost some mid-sized trees. This one is threatening to crush part of my new fence...suggestions?
View attachment 3578493
That would be simple, but he'd like to avoid crossing the fence entirely, which complicates it and leads to 5+ pages... so far.It should be a simple extraction. Cut off the limbs near the stump as high as you can reach while the treetop still supports the weight. Then start cutting the top in pieces and work your way back, cutting small pieces at a time. Small blocks at a time is all it takes.
From what I see in the picture I'd surrender about 20 feet of fence to the project and simply replace it. I'd start at the top and nibble along toward the existing natural hinge. Gravity will bring it down to you. Eventually you will end up with a roughly inverted 'V'. At that point use a few snatch blocks to pull it over from a safe distance after you have cut nearly through it. I believe your concern about the fence is misplaced. That much fence is pretty cheap. Regards, good luck.We had a pretty bad storm come through Sunday night/Monday morning. Lots of downed branches and trees. A guy not far from here was killed by one falling on his mobile home.
We avoided any really bad problems, but lost some mid-sized trees. This one is threatening to crush part of my new fence...suggestions?
View attachment 3578493
This is how I would deal with that.We had a pretty bad storm come through Sunday night/Monday morning. Lots of downed branches and trees. A guy not far from here was killed by one falling on his mobile home.
We avoided any really bad problems, but lost some mid-sized trees. This one is threatening to crush part of my new fence...suggestions?
The 'neighbor' is a commercial chicken farm. They lease the land from an absentee landowner. No one actually lives there except the chickens and guard dogs. It's just employees working their shift. The neighbor on the other side of the corner is a huge corporation that owns thousands of acres of fallow land.Looks simple start limbing from top back to the trunk. You could also tie rope around the trunk were it split so top trunk does not drop to ground.
Also look to be good time to introduce yourself to your neighbor get permission cross onto their property. Offer the cut wood to your neighbor.
I am amaze how neighbors with some acreage do not talk to each others.