Ed of all trades
Elite Member
If you don't want to use a chainsaw get an old cross cut saw, sharpened they do better than you think. My brother and I cut a cord of pulp wood with one once, but that is another story.
As someone suggested block and tackles can give you a tremendous mechanical advantage over that tree. Enough so that with enough pulleys and rope/cable, your golf cart could pull it out or at least up to shore so you can cut a chunk at a time in shallow water.
This is what I would do. I have to get into my creek all the time to cut up snags and yours is how they start, one long tree, then everything piles up against it. Before you know it the creek says,"I'm going around this thing" and cuts a new creek in my pasture.
Dump out your bar oil, & put Canola Oil in your chainsaw oil reservoir. The Canola works fine for bar lube while you cut the tree up and yes you can stick your bar under water(not the powerhead) and it will cut. When your all finished, dump out the Canola and replace with bar oil, then run the saw until the bar oil is back on the chain. Canola left in the saw for too long will congeal and clog the oil pump.
BTW...this particular "fishing hole" has produced several rainbows in the 28"-30" range and a couple of browns slightly bigger...!
Its biodegradable and won't harm the stream.Curious.....why the canola oil?
Its biodegradable and won't harm the stream.
Oh you environmentalists!!!! Just kidding......that makes sense...thanks!
Y'all ever hear of boats down there?? Get the ol' rowboat out there with a fat guy with a pole in the bow to hold it down an' another not quite so fat guy in the stern with a saw with about a 48 inch bar. Stick the bar in the water if you have to, and whittle 'er down to size. Wear a raincoat, 'cause you're gonna get wet!
Wood, even oak, doesn't weigh anything underwater, and it'll float in smaller pieces. Every piece you cut off that's sticking out means another piece will come to the top. Git 'er done, and get lots of pictures while yer at it!
Sean
To give some perspective of how the tree got there...here is a picture just after the river crested...