Be careful with that one if there's any stress on it, I've seen videos of hollow ones that splintered when they were cut.More pictures from yesterday's trip to the river house. {I did go down this morning, but just got high, moved wind chimes, swept, washed windows and gathered more caps and shoes}
Right behind the barn there are two big oaks that blew over, lifting their rootballs. This smaller oak is resting on the rootball of the bigger one {that's on the barn}. But it's hollow for at least 15-20 feet, with all the holes on the same side. I'm going to try to get it down and moved as gently as possible, then turn it into a planter.
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It's about 8 feet from the butt to where it rests on the rootball of the other tree. I'm thinking of cutting it just clear of that. But it's a good 50-60 footer, so lots of weight, even with it dead and hollow.Be careful with that one if there's any stress on it, I've seen videos of hollow ones that splintered when they were cut.
I know, the first time I screwed up my back was moving a green piece of Doug Fir that I cut down. Don't bench press a log and throw it...lol.It's about 8 feet from the butt to where it rests on the rootball of the other tree. I'm thinking of cutting it just clear of that. But it's a good 50-60 footer, so lots of weight, even with it dead and hollow.
Sounds safer than my first back injury. I was bush-hogging on an old IH gas tractor on my neighbor's place. I had gone to work that day expecting to ride the Snapper, dressed in cotton shorts and boat shoes. No shirt, no socks and no underwear. But she ask me to mow down by the river. The brush was head high with me seated on the tractor. I got into a wasp nest and got 23 stings. {mostly on my neck and shoulders, but one on that head that does it's own thinking. Maybe that is what they mean by cotton kills}I know, the first time I screwed up my back was moving a green piece of Doug Fir that I cut down. Don't bench press a log and throw it...lol.