Al this talk about having kids help, apparently I need to get with it and have a few of my own.
I wish I had help from folks who saw things the same way I do. I have a BIL who I'd be happy to hold a dustpan for as he sweeps because the teamwork is more like mind-reading. The times we've processed wood together it was like being on a NASCAR pit crew. What a blast. I've got another pal who "gets it" but he simply doesn't need the amount of wood I do, so there's no payoff for him. I can't do that. My biggest fear is being in a 3-legged race with my wife...
As much as I'd like to share the beauty sometimes, it's 90% alone time, and I get into it. But that irony is that adding a second person makes things go 3X faster.
But ANYTHING is better than having the WRONG person helping. That's my fallback mental position.
I HATE processing wood by myself. I get incredibly bored at a breakneck speed. My wife "knows" how to cut rounds, move rounds, split, and stack better than me...so she's out. My brother in law that lives down the road is an idiot. I refer to him as Bob Pinciotti. My buddy down the road, we can FLY through processing with lots of shop talk, but he's too flakey. I literally GIVE this guy wood. For free. Except for his help and company.
I was running this through my mind today as I'm ripping through 4, that's right 4, black locusts today. I'm starting to not like processing wood anymore.
Anyone else loners on this same stuff? How do you manage to keep at it?
When I see folks who want someone to be with them when cutting for safety reasons I think about a friend who owns some property next to us. He had a large pile of oak he wondered if I could split. But when he found out I would be alone he got scared. Didn't think I should be working alone. I did do it alone though and finally got him to understand. Now he knows I actually prefer being alone. Also cutting or bucking and working in the woods with a group of people always makes me very nervous. I've actually seen more injuries when there are more than 2 people than I have with anyone working alone.
However, I will say that people that are new to wood cutting perhaps are much better off not working alone. But, the other person should have some experience.
If I'm processing wood with an ax I have to do it alone if I want to finish in a timely fashion. My son (6 year old) will come out and help, he has a hatchet, every 5 min I have to help him. My wife won't touch firewood until it needs to go into the stove. My neighbor starts talking politics, we don't agree on a lot of things. If I am using a splitter it is different. Having 3 people around make splitting go a lot faster. Me handling the wood, someone just moving the hydraulic lever, and the last stacking.
Must be nice. I'm serious, my BIL is an idiot. OSHA came to my work, I told him the story on the way to a NYE party. 30 min later hes telling the story to everyone VERBATIM like it happened to him! I just don't think he relizes hes doing it.
He's helped a few times and I just quit asking and decline his offers. I run Stihl Farm Boss-MS290. It's a mean saw for 49cc's. My BIL has like MS190 and argued with me his is better and wondered why I need a saw "that big." All while his won't start.
And...he knows EXACTLY what kind of wood I'm felling. Right. I get the "that's not oak, that's maple, maple burns better than hickory, pine burns great, cherry trees arent any good.
Back when I was working cutting cedar shape blocks out of the bush we had one guy in our crew who started bringing his little dog with him to work. Everybody on the crew told him it wasn't a good idea, but he had his excuses why he thought it was OK. Anyway, every week or so the helicopter would come come out to pick up our slings of shake blocks and drop them down by the road. The helicopter had a cable that hung below it that had a hook connected to a 40 lb cylindrical mechanism that had the buttons on it that opened and closed the hook. It was our job to fasten the hook on to our slings when the helicopter brought it over, and you really had to keep your eye on that thing when the helicopter pilot flew it over or you could end up getting bashed in the head with it. An inexperienced helicopter pilot, or a windy day made things that much more crucial you keep your eye on it.Dennis I was going to say something very similar. I actually prefer felling trees alone, so I don't have to worry about where the other person/people was. A friend agreed to help me fell some trees one time, but when he showed up he brought his wife, two kids, and dog!
But if the tree is tricky in any way I do want someone with me. Once it's down safely, I usually tackle the rest of the job alone.
When my daughters help me I refer to it as "Half the work in twice the time."My son has just started learning to split (he's almost 9) and when he's with me I get almost no wood split because I'm watching him.
Im
I'm an Ironworker...the past year I've noticed it taking it's toll on me. No more throwing kegs of rods or 50 # spools of wire around anymore. A dolly proves more effective.
I'm just tired busting my @$$ for people to come over and leave my door open while they undress their outer layers and shake the cold off...while I fell trees...dangerously alone.
Idk. Just venting as I grumble up from getting my saw and crap ready for tomorrow.
As others have stated, I enjoy the solitude. I am a teacher surrounded by 5th graders all day. I come home to three kids and a wife, and they are great, but some days I want nothing more than to be alone in the woods.
As a teacher, I stand and move all day, but I don't get any real exercise. Cutting wood gets me some exercise and it is productive exercise rather than sitting on a treadmill in an enclosed air space surrounded by people.
A tip: it sounds as though you are trying to rush through cutting wood and trying to get as much done as possible in as short a time as possible. Take a breath, slow down and don't feel as though you need to cut a three month supply every time you are out. Take a break. Turn off the saw and take a look around your surroundings for a while. Watch some birds, I.D. Some trees.....you get the idea.
And I don't ever get frustrated working with wood like I can working on other projects around the house. No running up to the hardware store for some part, doesn't cost much of anything to swing an ax. No tedious painting that gets scratched anyway two hours after I finish.
I'm an ironworker as well... I'm only 4 months short of 40.. and I have found myself this winter holding down my couch.... not by choice.. but rather the disc at C4/C5... it's extremely difficult to code weld when one's arms go completely numb randomly.. and just as difficult to operate a saw...
As to the topic... I typically fell and limb alone.... the wife and kids come along when I am bucking to load and transport home... then usually the wife runs the splitter... I get the wheelbarrows to the stacks... and my kids stack it.
last 2 weeks of october... all of us get the outside stacks inside.
that being said... my neck has completely screwed up the "usual".. and I'm probably going to have to buy wood this year
Wow Bret. That does not sound good. Hope it gets better by itself rather than any surgery. That is nasty. Good that you have some family to help.
That's exactly why I'm dual enrolled in 2 universities...for secondary education and workforce education...and studyimg for te AWS CWI exam.the chances of it not ending in surgery isn't good.... I have another MRI coming up.. and then we'll have a better idea of what's going to need to be done.
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