Ahhhhh.....sarcasm font eh?
Thanks Sean. I'm in Kentucky so we get plenty of rain and snow. I'll likely need some sort of covering.
By the way, cute pup in your avatar. Your dog?
Here's mine. Her name is Kineye.
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Nice. With that kind of land you have room for wood sheds, top covered stacks on pallets etc. What a lot of people here do is dry it outside until its ready for the next burning season and then move it into a wood shed. A few replys for me to read up on since I was last on so that may have been covered. I built Tundra a kennel that needed a 6 ft high chain link that she quickly learned to jump over with one hop so we had to put a chicken wire roof on top that was strong enough for snow. Spied her jumping it once and she cleared it like we walk over a speed bumpI have 5 acres of dense woods and about 1 acre of clearing/mowing behind the house. TONS of room for a shed. My neighbor has 7 acres and my other has 2 and they already begged me to take all the wood I need.
I feel like Jaws....."I'm gonna need a bigger boat (shed)" hehe
There are tons of opinions about the ideal splitting maul. Some folks like the "monster maul" others like a more traditional maul with about an 8 pound head and then folks like me like the new Fiskars X27 maul. Unless you are going to be splitting tons of wood as a business, most folks find manual splitting with a maul works just fine.Great stuff! Thanks! Sounds like Labonville full chaps are a slam dunk with y'all here. Now it just comes down to a helmet with ear muffs and a face screen. I like the looks of that combo.
I can see where gloves and glasses would be disposable. I'm not super close to a Lowes so Amazon Prime and I are good friends. I can certainly make a trip though. Was thinking about getting an ax too and try to split some logs the old fashioned way until I save up for a log splitter.
So.......ax suggestions? Splitting mauls? Sledge Hammers?
I should rename this thread "Help Josh Get Started" haha.
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Yeah her name is Tundra. We picked her up 7 years ago from a sled dog company. Very good with the kids, good jumper, good digger, mouser, typical husky. I see yours is bi eyed as well... same eye. Good looking dog you have there, almost looks like they could be related. Garlic on the left if youre wondering and larch on pallets and top covered in the back.
Nice. With that kind of land you have room for wood sheds, top covered stacks on pallets etc. What a lot of people here do is dry it outside until its ready for the next burning season and then move it into a wood shed. A few replys for me to read up on since I was last on so that may have been covered. I built Tundra a kennel that needed a 6 ft high chain link that she quickly learned to jump over with one hop so we had to put a chicken wire roof on top that was strong enough for snow. Spied her jumping it once and she cleared it like we walk over a speed bump
There are tons of opinions about the ideal splitting maul. Some folks like the "monster maul" others like a more traditional maul with about an 8 pound head and then folks like me like the new Fiskars X27 maul. Unless you are going to be splitting tons of wood as a business, most folks find manual splitting with a maul works just fine.
For felling, try checking out the series put together as training for BC Fallers and the Husqvarna series of information. Both of them will give you a good head start as a new tree faller. The BC Faller series seems to only use a Humbolt style notch because of their focus on lumber. The Husky videos focus much more on an open face notch because they are convinced it is best. Any style notch will work so it is really up to you which one you are comfortable using. I would watch both sets of videos to get a feel for what all is involved in felling and bucking.
P.S. I really like the Rockman helmet system. It's a little more than the Elvex.
Not everyone loves the X27. How tall and heavy are you? Many prefer the X25. I remember one rant from Bigg_Redd on this last year, in particular.Getting ready to order a Fiskars x27 and x7 hatchet. What do y'all recommend to keep them sharp with? Fiskars makes an ax sharpener for $10. Any good? Thanks.
Not everyone loves the X27. How tall and heavy are you? Many prefer the X25. I remember one rant from Bigg_Redd on this last year, in particular.
Both series are on You Tube.Thanks for the advice! Are these on Netflix or YouTube anywhere?
Go with the X27. Longer handle means lower likelihood of putting the axe head in your foot than the X25.
Both series are on You Tube.
BC Faller videos:
(broken link removed)
Husqvarna:
Note: the Husky videos are not organized in one spot like the BC Faller videos but you can easily link to them from this one. Just look at the stuff that shows up after you have viewed the one I linked and you will find many others.
Concerning a helmet: I always wear mine. I figure that if there's a kickback, I'd rather have the chain hit the helmet than my nose. It's probably true that the helmet will be kicked off my head, but I figure it's still worth it. Maybe I should look in to helmets with chin straps.
Head and neck injuries make up 10% of all chainsaw contact injuries, and if you're contacting your head or neck with a chainsaw, I guess we could suppose most of those are due to kickback. I do know leg injuries are 5x - 10x more common than head or neck injuries, depending whose statistics you use.Is this really possible? I've had a couple kickbacks large enough for my arm to hit the chain brake.. It works.
I have a hard time imagining a kick back large enough to come anywhere close to your head.. After all, you should still be holding onto it.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15027558 said:Each year over 3 million new chainsaws are sold in the United States. The operation of these newer saws combined with the millions of older chainsaws in circulation results in over 28,000 chainsaw-related injures annually. The majority of the injuries involve the hands and lower extremities with less than 10% involving injuries to the head and neck regions. Deaths while operating a chainsaw are extremely rare. The most common hazards associated with chainsaws are injuries caused by kickback, pushback, and pull-in. Kickback is the most common and poses the greatest hazard.
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