SOLO RIGGING / V - RIG

Eucalyptus todtiana solo tree dismantle.

Пікірлер: 35

  • @krouchingtigerr
    @krouchingtigerr7 күн бұрын

    Really appreciate the precision of all these cuts. Very cool to see you cut and guide each bit down with such moment by moment awareness (goes without saying when your life is on the line, but still...).

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    7 күн бұрын

    @@krouchingtigerr Thank you! I find I end up in some other dimension on the ropes.

  • @metzgerbass
    @metzgerbass3 күн бұрын

    Great work! Love the truck and gear setups.

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    3 күн бұрын

    @@metzgerbass Thank you sir!

  • @johnnywolfe8485
    @johnnywolfe848510 күн бұрын

    Nice one, no damage to the property or you 👊 I was Brickie all my life and the lads would take the piss out of me about my 10” trowel. I still got plenty down and my rist is still in good shape. Seeing you mastering the smaller saw reminded me. It is how you use it!! Stat safe Old Man Eflow ⚒️

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    10 күн бұрын

    @@johnnywolfe8485 Cheers geeza! The first big rigging section, I thought worst case scenario and pulled the logs with a tag line, plus I didn't want to ring you for a cash job repairing the finishing layer of bricks haha. COME ON ENGLAND! Cheers Eflow.

  • @troyerthedestroyer
    @troyerthedestroyer10 күн бұрын

    Wow! Big production, tiny tree! Good job, you kept it interesting!

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    9 күн бұрын

    @@troyerthedestroyer Cheers mate! The tree felt big after a full week of contract climbing haha.

  • @Sethhaun78
    @Sethhaun788 күн бұрын

    Spars looked like old bull horns

  • @julianalderson3938
    @julianalderson39389 күн бұрын

    Nice bro, seemed kinda sound but yer liftin everything. Cheers

  • @ferminsuarez1131
    @ferminsuarez11319 күн бұрын

    Nice job on the span rigging (impressive for a one man job). Take it easy brother don't work too hard! Cheers!

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    9 күн бұрын

    @@ferminsuarez1131 Cheers bro! Solo climbing is never easy. The span rigging made the job run smoothly. Climb safe & enjoy your week ahead.

  • @seanshaffer2271
    @seanshaffer227110 күн бұрын

    What chipper do you have?

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    10 күн бұрын

    Hansa C13 - 90mm wood chipper

  • @julianalderson3938
    @julianalderson39389 күн бұрын

    Some would just pull em over. But no fun. Cheers

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    9 күн бұрын

    @@julianalderson3938 That was my first plan, but one lead was to close to the horse fence and would of damaged the adjacent tree and maybe punched a hole in the driveway. Ropes & GoPro!

  • @brettblack7049

    @brettblack7049

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@ArcaneArborWolfe Then cut the one lead 😅. Oh well, climbers will climb. Nice work 👏.

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    8 күн бұрын

    @@brettblack7049 You made me laugh, the other stem was too close to a newly planted mature pear tree, so I ended up going in to 100% discipline climbing mode, plus the other driveway I didn't want to damage.

  • @brettblack7049

    @brettblack7049

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@ArcaneArborWolfe gotta do what you gotta do to make the customer happy. I do everything I can to avoid climbing, many times that means I just turn down the job. When you work by yourself and aren't s proficient climber, it's wise to avoid climbing alone as much as possible. Have a great week.

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    7 күн бұрын

    @@brettblack7049 We are completely opposite. I start fabricating worst case scenarios in my head if the tree is 50 / 50 climb or fell, so I always put a rope up and do what I do best ( control freak ) dismantle the tree down. I checked out your KZread, you got some good felling videos up. Likewise bro, enjoy your week.

  • @Sethhaun78
    @Sethhaun788 күн бұрын

    Ox en horns

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    7 күн бұрын

    @@Sethhaun78 Horn art in the clients garden.

  • @mcauleyman
    @mcauleyman10 күн бұрын

    Gotta love how the stihl shuts off after 2 seconds of not cutting

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    10 күн бұрын

    @@mcauleyman Hey mate! I wish Stihl would delete that feature on the generation two MSA 220 T model.

  • @julianalderson3938

    @julianalderson3938

    9 күн бұрын

    Maybe bit longer be good but keeps ya honest spose.

  • @julianalderson3938

    @julianalderson3938

    9 күн бұрын

    Not block into trailer? Haha someone elses'

  • @thegreenrevival4424
    @thegreenrevival442410 күн бұрын

    Probably would have felled them out.

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@thegreenrevival4424 That was my plan, but the client didn't want any holes in their driveway & anymore damage to the remaining brick wall. The quotation / amount reflected the tree surgery performed in the video.

  • @thegreenrevival4424

    @thegreenrevival4424

    10 күн бұрын

    I totally respect that

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    10 күн бұрын

    @@thegreenrevival4424 Cheers bro! Are you in the arboriculture / tree industry?

  • @thegreenrevival4424

    @thegreenrevival4424

    10 күн бұрын

    I am indeed. Full time climber up in Scotland.

  • @n085fs
    @n085fs10 күн бұрын

    I'ma say it again. Australia really is backwards / upside-down with everything. First time I made the comment was about being able to make the compression relief cut further away from the trunk than the tension release cut. That just can't be done with trees in my area (45N 75W). And now, the rigging is backwards too. The porta-wrap is normal. But the dead-eye sling is usually placed as the anchor in the taller tree, so the lower tree can be taken down with less moving of ropes, and the load rope is tied to the log that'll be falling since it needs to be un-tied at each fall either way; but at least the dead-eye will remain stationary for multiple falls. Methinks ya done made your job far more complicated than it needed to be, unless of course you're paid by the hour, which then makes complete sense. Never get paid by the hour. They're not paying for your hours of time on site, they're paying for your years of time spent learning how to do it so that your time on site is minimalized so they can enjoy the majority of their day without a stranger to be worrying about on their property. I do see what you're doing with the double anchor up top to make the log go between, but since you're lowering controlled, it all seems like wasted time, especially since one was laying on the brick anyway.

  • @marcbaker0650

    @marcbaker0650

    10 күн бұрын

    Its called span rigging. Its a pretty common method used

  • @ArcaneArborWolfe

    @ArcaneArborWolfe

    10 күн бұрын

    @@n085fs Australia is a strange place. The quotation, amount charged and methodology gave me time to not rush and put the GoPro on to capture the tree dismantle. The rigging is span or v - rigging, very common practice with modern climbers. The log on the brick wall, that is the section getting knocked down and replaced. If I was contract climbing the tree I removed, I would of done everything the same but replaced the porta wrap with a pulley block and put the porta wrap down on the ground for the groundie.