As an ex forester Clive,I thought you might like them.
Bob,It's good fun as long as we are careful.I admire the way you did your sycamores, must have been a fair cow with all that foliage.Like your cherry picker too,very handy.Do you have any trouble with the local council with rubbish fires to burn any excess?Are you on a good sized block?
My only regret has been the toll it has taken on my back. I used to use a 36" chainsaw and after a 10 hour stint I would realize that it's too heavy for lopping. Should have got myself a few smaller saws.... Hey-ho, that's it. Too late to cry now![]()
I agree, Clive. I started with a 20" McCulloch 610 (a grand saw, I still use it) but have moved to smaller saws for trimming - a 10" Pole Saw (a Strimmer with extension shafts and a little chainsaw on the end - very useful around the apple trees). A 12" Stihl 181C, a great little saw for logging as its light yet powerful. Then there is a useless 18" electric thing - a big mistake. A 20" Kraftech KT5200?) petrol (not bad in a cheap, plasticky way), the old 20" McCulloch warhorse and a 24" Solo 662 - a bit of a beast.
I have long wanted a decent 36" saw - or larger, but manage with the 24" when cutting large trees.
As I head towards my 69th birthday I find it more tiring to do the extreme outdoor stuff for more than a few hours. It catches up with us in the end.
Bob.
At least 3 yrs old - much younger and they are too wet, much older than 4 or 5 then too dry and burn too quickly.What age would your firewood trees be Steve?when I think of Europe there is always the thought that most timber is a good age.