Sweet! I enjoyed the live explanation. So cool to see the differences in western and eastern cutting. I'm a timber cutter in Tennessee we cut mostly white oak and chestnut oak up in the mountains. Y'all be safe !
@59MackB6113 сағат бұрын
You do a nice job explaining. Thanks for sharing.
@markzadlock42299 сағат бұрын
Looking good Phil with the shake n bake sawdust coating lol ! ❤ keep cutting brother and keep safe. The new Jersey logman.
@deanzoil-yc8no12 сағат бұрын
Nice chunk of Doug Fir it will make some nice lumber. Seen some cutters at Simpson out Hoquiam way. You do right by them. CHERRS!!!
@dennisdixon63449 сағат бұрын
Kinda hard to tell.. But I'm betting that's a white fir ???
@timberfallingcouple9 сағат бұрын
@dennisdixon6344 just about 100 year old Doug fir stand.
@stusue973312 сағат бұрын
Nice! How I feel when I cut down a tree that needs more than my 20" bar lol.
@billfoster21312 сағат бұрын
Another Axe question... Do you use it for anything other than driving a Wedge or cutting a strand of wire rope? Is it even sharp?
@geoffreygreen29714 сағат бұрын
😊
@user-ktm890rider14 сағат бұрын
Good cutting do you not like having a belt scabbard for your axe? 🍻😎
@timberfallingcouple12 сағат бұрын
I do not like it one bit. It is among my worst nightmares imagining trying to squeeze through the brush in an emergency and getting hung up by the axe handle. The way I went my axe through the belt, it pulls free and gets dropped and lost if it gets hung up on anything
@haroldolds10 сағат бұрын
@@timberfallingcouple Yep, I once tried one that had the axe handle in the middle of my back, sticking straight up. Big mistake, bend over to go under brush and guess what happens.
@haroldolds9 сағат бұрын
A guy I know in Idaho loves that kind of scabbard, not so much brush there.