My neighbor had not quite finished felling a large tree, and his saw stopped and wouldn't start. It actually was a thirty-foot "stump" that was sticking up at a 45 degree angle. The whole tree had fallen, and when a cut was made, this "stump" popped up into the air. The base of the tree was about 24 inches in diameter.
Anyway, I get there, and this situation was really a bit beyond our capability and our saws' capabilities (we both have 18 inch bars). The neighbor had made the cut up high, where the base was narrower. He hadn't cut a wedge out on the side to which it was leaning, so it wasn't easy to cut without the saw getting stuck.
I really wanted to say "this just isn't safe -- there's no way with our equipment to finish the cut safely."
But I couldn't really say that without making my friend feel stupid; we would have had to leave this thing hanging, or call in some pros. So I took it slowly, considered each step, bent a few of my safety rules, and we got it down. The two rules I bent were 1. not cutting something wider than my bar and 2. not using the saw a shoulder height. I was extra careful.
The neighbor is a great guy, good with mechanical things, but ignorant about chainsaw safety.
Probably the wrong decision, but things turned out OK. I don't want to get in a situation like that again.
Anyway, I get there, and this situation was really a bit beyond our capability and our saws' capabilities (we both have 18 inch bars). The neighbor had made the cut up high, where the base was narrower. He hadn't cut a wedge out on the side to which it was leaning, so it wasn't easy to cut without the saw getting stuck.
I really wanted to say "this just isn't safe -- there's no way with our equipment to finish the cut safely."
But I couldn't really say that without making my friend feel stupid; we would have had to leave this thing hanging, or call in some pros. So I took it slowly, considered each step, bent a few of my safety rules, and we got it down. The two rules I bent were 1. not cutting something wider than my bar and 2. not using the saw a shoulder height. I was extra careful.
The neighbor is a great guy, good with mechanical things, but ignorant about chainsaw safety.
Probably the wrong decision, but things turned out OK. I don't want to get in a situation like that again.