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24th July 2019, 11:27 AM #1Try not to be late, but never be early.
- Join Date
- Apr 2011
- Location
- Bakers Hill WA
- Age
- 75
- Posts
- 1,077
Saved time, money and gained exercise.
We've this Marri that needs to be removed. To avoid damaging the surrounding shrubs and nearby grape vines it has to be lopped rather than just felled in one go. Normally I would drive down to Midland and hire a pole chainsaw to do the lopping. The hiring and returning would take about 3.5 hours and the cost $100+, cue the BRAINWAVE. Why don't I try using our pruning saw on a long pole? I have a long telescopic aluminium pole that was originally on a concreters bull float, a broom handle at the far end and into the socket of the saw handle. Everything else about this job is the same, limb restrained by rope to the car to ease it down. It takes about 7-10 minutes of sawing to get through a 200mm branch, they start cracking at about the 2/3 mark. That's not 7-10 minutes constant sawing, 50% of the time is spent breathing heavily in neutral.
As each limb is dropped it's cut into manageable lengths with the chainsaw, thicker sections split for the firewood heap,and leafy greens loaded onto the ute for delivery to the local tip where they will be mulched. If we had a hired pole-saw all of the limbs would be dropped in a tangled mess so that we could get the saw off hire in one day, this way is safer and we can take our time.
Cheers,
Geoff.
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24th July 2019 11:27 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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24th July 2019, 03:23 PM #2GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- May 2003
- Location
- Central Coast, NSW
- Posts
- 3,330
I’ve been using one of these on long ropes around our place for the same job
New Fast&Easy Survival Chain Saw Hand ChainSaw Camping Tool Pocket EDC Gear Black-in Tent Accessories from Sports & Entertainment on Aliexpress.com | Alibaba Group
It’s astonishing how quick it cuts, but I find it’s use difficult because the branch pitches under wind or gravity.Apologies for unnoticed autocomplete errors.
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25th July 2019, 09:34 AM #3Try not to be late, but never be early.
- Join Date
- Apr 2011
- Location
- Bakers Hill WA
- Age
- 75
- Posts
- 1,077
I've thought of one of those too, Arron, but now that I know the pruning saw works ok it'll do for the few times that it's needed.
Cheers,
Geoff.
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16th August 2019, 09:41 PM #4
I used similar with a 6 metre length of al tube a mate gave me.
The saw was on another metre which was slit and held on with a jubilee clip.
Worked well to trim branches off a couple of blueberry ashes that had grown a little too large for suburbia.
My son was over the other day a noticed a blade on the louvres on our upstairs exhaust fan jamned open. He suggested we get a ladder and he’d climb up and use the tree lopper to close it.
After we got the lopper he was able close it from the driveway.
Sure beat climbing on the roof and hanging over with a broom or something from above.
H.Jimcracks for the rich and/or wealthy. (aka GKB '88)
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28th September 2019, 05:26 PM #5Try not to be late, but never be early.
- Join Date
- Apr 2011
- Location
- Bakers Hill WA
- Age
- 75
- Posts
- 1,077
A bit more exercise splitting firewood for winter 2021.
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