Half my woods looks/looked like that. Looks like it will hit nothing if it falls. So other than time consuming it's not a big deal.
I posted my property so if someone gets killed by a tree... one less stupid human in the world wasting air.
Do you have any other smaller trees you can practice on? Once you've done it a few times it isn't as scary. It's always scary cutting down a 2'+ tree though.
Since it is tangled up in other trees it can't go far. So you just need to pick the side to cut from that you think it isn't going to go towards and clear an escape path. Then trim off any limbs that may stab you if the tree moves (including off any live trees).
I just use a decent large saw and make a bunch of small cuts on the bottom side. I normally prefer an underpowered saw (2hp or so and 14" or smaller bar) but on something like this it's best to have a 4hp+ and 18"+ bar. After 6-8 1/3 of the way through cuts, cut all the way through in the middle of these cuts. It will then drop to the ground and even if you have to keep doing this it will be less scary. As soon as you think it's going to go make a hasty exit. Practice hitting the chain brake in one fluid run-like-hell motion so you aren't running through the woods with a running chainsaw that can eat flesh. If it doesn't go, wait at least a few minutes because wind or the weight of the tree can cause things to break. It sucks when you start getting ready to make a cut and the whole thing tries to kill you.
In reality, after the trunk is separated from the root ball, I'd try to pull it down with a garden tractor with at least a 40' chain so then it is less of a pain to deal with. Don't use a short chain because the tractor might not be able to outrun a sliding 8,000lb log. I found out one time the hard way that a 20' chain isn't quite long enough.
I posted my property so if someone gets killed by a tree... one less stupid human in the world wasting air.
Do you have any other smaller trees you can practice on? Once you've done it a few times it isn't as scary. It's always scary cutting down a 2'+ tree though.
Since it is tangled up in other trees it can't go far. So you just need to pick the side to cut from that you think it isn't going to go towards and clear an escape path. Then trim off any limbs that may stab you if the tree moves (including off any live trees).
I just use a decent large saw and make a bunch of small cuts on the bottom side. I normally prefer an underpowered saw (2hp or so and 14" or smaller bar) but on something like this it's best to have a 4hp+ and 18"+ bar. After 6-8 1/3 of the way through cuts, cut all the way through in the middle of these cuts. It will then drop to the ground and even if you have to keep doing this it will be less scary. As soon as you think it's going to go make a hasty exit. Practice hitting the chain brake in one fluid run-like-hell motion so you aren't running through the woods with a running chainsaw that can eat flesh. If it doesn't go, wait at least a few minutes because wind or the weight of the tree can cause things to break. It sucks when you start getting ready to make a cut and the whole thing tries to kill you.
In reality, after the trunk is separated from the root ball, I'd try to pull it down with a garden tractor with at least a 40' chain so then it is less of a pain to deal with. Don't use a short chain because the tractor might not be able to outrun a sliding 8,000lb log. I found out one time the hard way that a 20' chain isn't quite long enough.
Chaps being delivered Friday....haven’t touched the original leaning tree yet.
..sounded like a cannon going off..