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The New Coffee Room

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  3. Broken Trees

Broken Trees

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
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  • B brenda
    24 Jun 2020, 23:18

    Good call, Copper. There are some things best left to the professionals with the expensive equipment and insurance.

    G Offline
    G Offline
    George K
    wrote on 24 Jun 2020, 23:20 last edited by
    #33

    @brenda said in Broken Trees:

    Good call, Copper. There are some things best left to the professionals with the expensive equipment and insurance.

    Good choice.

    Stump removal?

    "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

    The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

    1 Reply Last reply
    • B brenda
      24 Jun 2020, 23:18

      Good call, Copper. There are some things best left to the professionals with the expensive equipment and insurance.

      J Offline
      J Offline
      Jolly
      wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 00:02 last edited by
      #34

      @brenda said in Broken Trees:

      Good call, Copper. There are some things best left to the professionals with the expensive equipment and insurance.

      Yeah, but what's the adventure in that?😄

      Over the years, we've dropped two that were close to the house (I'm talking 30 feet of so). The elm wasn't huge, maybe the size of copper's sweetgum. The pin oak was about 36" on the stump.

      “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

      Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

      1 Reply Last reply
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        R Offline
        Rainman
        wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 01:24 last edited by
        #35

        $1200.00
        Ouch.
        And then you get the summons to appear, for taking down a tree without permission a permit.
        Oh, wait. That's my neighborhood, I forgot.

        1 Reply Last reply
        • L Offline
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          Larry
          wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 01:36 last edited by
          #36

          Geez.. I think I'll go into the tree removal bidness...

          J 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 01:50
          • L Larry
            25 Jun 2020, 01:36

            Geez.. I think I'll go into the tree removal bidness...

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Jolly
            wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 01:50 last edited by
            #37

            @Larry said in Broken Trees:

            Geez.. I think I'll go into the tree removal bidness...

            Copper was quoted the going rate.

            “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

            Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

            1 Reply Last reply
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              L Offline
              Larry
              wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 01:54 last edited by
              #38

              Yes... I just had no idea it costs that much.

              1 Reply Last reply
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                jon-nyc
                wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 01:59 last edited by
                #39

                Copper that’s about what I paid to have a tree taken down a couple years ago. I posted about it at the time.

                They were in and out in 2 hours. It was something to see.

                Only non-witches get due process.

                • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                1 Reply Last reply
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                  C Online
                  Copper
                  wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 02:11 last edited by
                  #40

                  For the moment the stump will remain. It is a good 25 feet from where the lawn ends and a few feet from the back fence.

                  Not wilderness exactly, but kind of a natural area. I can get away with a stump for a while it won't bother anything. There are about 50 trees back there, I'll have to take some more sooner or later, I'll save up a few stumps and do them together.

                  R 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 02:22
                  • C Copper
                    25 Jun 2020, 02:11

                    For the moment the stump will remain. It is a good 25 feet from where the lawn ends and a few feet from the back fence.

                    Not wilderness exactly, but kind of a natural area. I can get away with a stump for a while it won't bother anything. There are about 50 trees back there, I'll have to take some more sooner or later, I'll save up a few stumps and do them together.

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                    Rainman
                    wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 02:22 last edited by
                    #41

                    @Copper
                    Copper, if you cut low enough, you could rent one of those tree stump grinders. They work amazingly well, and work relatively quickly. Not too hard on the back, though I'd never attempt it nowadays.

                    On our street, the developer must have gotten a real deal on Ash. Useless tree, but lined all up and down our street. Always sickly, internal rot, I had to have it removed because of fear it would fall on the house.

                    There's also something that can be applied to a trunk, that causes it to decompose more rapidly than natural. I don't know anything about it, maybe someone here has used it. I'm suggesting stuff only if you see another price tag coming your way to get things back to normal.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • J Online
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                      jon-nyc
                      wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 02:54 last edited by
                      #42

                      The guys that pulled my tree down grinded the stump down too.

                      Only non-witches get due process.

                      • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • J Online
                        J Online
                        jon-nyc
                        wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 02:56 last edited by
                        #43

                        I talked to a guy about removing another stump and he said ‘we can’t get the back hoe in here but maybe we can attach a winch to it from the truck and pull it out, but I’m not sure we can do that either’

                        I said to him “when I was 14, my dad handed me a shovel and an axe and told me to get a stump out. It took all day but I did it”. He was surprised, like it was a method he’d never heard of.

                        Only non-witches get due process.

                        • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                        R 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 03:13
                        • J jon-nyc
                          25 Jun 2020, 02:56

                          I talked to a guy about removing another stump and he said ‘we can’t get the back hoe in here but maybe we can attach a winch to it from the truck and pull it out, but I’m not sure we can do that either’

                          I said to him “when I was 14, my dad handed me a shovel and an axe and told me to get a stump out. It took all day but I did it”. He was surprised, like it was a method he’d never heard of.

                          R Offline
                          R Offline
                          Rainman
                          wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 03:13 last edited by
                          #44

                          @jon-nyc said in Broken Trees:

                          I talked to a guy about removing another stump and he said ‘we can’t get the back hoe in here but maybe we can attach a winch to it from the truck and pull it out, but I’m not sure we can do that either’

                          I said to him “when I was 14, my dad handed me a shovel and an axe and told me to get a stump out. It took all day but I did it”. He was surprised, like it was a method he’d never heard of.

                          Yeah, been there. Several times when I was growing up, a storm would knock over a tree or two on our property. It was just a given, the Dad hands over tools to The Son, and The Son never even figures it's within any viable parameter of acceptable complaining, so you just did it. And your older sister (in my case) never did anything outside, nothing at all, ever. Never. She got away with everything. Outside hard work for me and my brother was like some sort of 11th commandment or something, and always landed on my Saturdays.

                          Not sure why I'm even commenting. I bet most guys on this forum had the same or similar expectation when growing up. Cats and Brenda probably were not spared the physical labor. Taiwan Girl, hmmm, I'd be interested to know about her intimate relationship with tree stumps.

                          I B 2 Replies Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 09:36
                          • H Offline
                            H Offline
                            Horace
                            wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 03:21 last edited by
                            #45

                            Your sister sounds pretty.

                            Education is extremely important.

                            R 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 04:36
                            • J Offline
                              J Offline
                              Jolly
                              wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 03:26 last edited by
                              #46

                              Sweetgum will sometimes regrow from the stump.

                              “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                              Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                              L 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 04:43
                              • H Horace
                                25 Jun 2020, 03:21

                                Your sister sounds pretty.

                                R Offline
                                R Offline
                                Rainman
                                wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 04:36 last edited by
                                #47

                                @Horace said in Broken Trees:

                                Your sister sounds pretty.

                                Pretty? Pretty what?

                                I had two sisters,
                                I think a house fell on the first one. đŸŒȘ

                                C 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 04:41
                                • R Rainman
                                  25 Jun 2020, 04:36

                                  @Horace said in Broken Trees:

                                  Your sister sounds pretty.

                                  Pretty? Pretty what?

                                  I had two sisters,
                                  I think a house fell on the first one. đŸŒȘ

                                  C Offline
                                  C Offline
                                  Catseye3
                                  wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 04:41 last edited by
                                  #48

                                  @Rainman said in Broken Trees:

                                  I think a house fell on the first one.

                                  And her little dog, too!

                                  Success is measured by your discipline and inner peace. – Mike Ditka

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • J Jolly
                                    25 Jun 2020, 03:26

                                    Sweetgum will sometimes regrow from the stump.

                                    L Offline
                                    L Offline
                                    Larry
                                    wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 04:43 last edited by Larry
                                    #49

                                    @Jolly said in Broken Trees:

                                    Sweetgum will sometimes regrow from the stump.

                                    Yes. And instead of one trunk you'll end up with 20 small trunks.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • R Rainman
                                      25 Jun 2020, 03:13

                                      @jon-nyc said in Broken Trees:

                                      I talked to a guy about removing another stump and he said ‘we can’t get the back hoe in here but maybe we can attach a winch to it from the truck and pull it out, but I’m not sure we can do that either’

                                      I said to him “when I was 14, my dad handed me a shovel and an axe and told me to get a stump out. It took all day but I did it”. He was surprised, like it was a method he’d never heard of.

                                      Yeah, been there. Several times when I was growing up, a storm would knock over a tree or two on our property. It was just a given, the Dad hands over tools to The Son, and The Son never even figures it's within any viable parameter of acceptable complaining, so you just did it. And your older sister (in my case) never did anything outside, nothing at all, ever. Never. She got away with everything. Outside hard work for me and my brother was like some sort of 11th commandment or something, and always landed on my Saturdays.

                                      Not sure why I'm even commenting. I bet most guys on this forum had the same or similar expectation when growing up. Cats and Brenda probably were not spared the physical labor. Taiwan Girl, hmmm, I'd be interested to know about her intimate relationship with tree stumps.

                                      I Offline
                                      I Offline
                                      Improviso
                                      wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 09:36 last edited by
                                      #50

                                      @Rainman said in Broken Trees:

                                      Outside hard work for me and my brother was like some sort of 11th commandment or something, and always landed on my Saturdays.

                                      Not sure why I'm even commenting. I bet most guys on this forum had the same or similar expectation when growing up.

                                      Damn... it was like I was reading MY story about growing up.

                                      We have the freedom to choose our actions, but we do not get to choose our consequences.
                                      Yes, there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run, there's still time to change the road you're on.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • R Rainman
                                        25 Jun 2020, 03:13

                                        @jon-nyc said in Broken Trees:

                                        I talked to a guy about removing another stump and he said ‘we can’t get the back hoe in here but maybe we can attach a winch to it from the truck and pull it out, but I’m not sure we can do that either’

                                        I said to him “when I was 14, my dad handed me a shovel and an axe and told me to get a stump out. It took all day but I did it”. He was surprised, like it was a method he’d never heard of.

                                        Yeah, been there. Several times when I was growing up, a storm would knock over a tree or two on our property. It was just a given, the Dad hands over tools to The Son, and The Son never even figures it's within any viable parameter of acceptable complaining, so you just did it. And your older sister (in my case) never did anything outside, nothing at all, ever. Never. She got away with everything. Outside hard work for me and my brother was like some sort of 11th commandment or something, and always landed on my Saturdays.

                                        Not sure why I'm even commenting. I bet most guys on this forum had the same or similar expectation when growing up. Cats and Brenda probably were not spared the physical labor. Taiwan Girl, hmmm, I'd be interested to know about her intimate relationship with tree stumps.

                                        B Offline
                                        B Offline
                                        brenda
                                        wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 15:55 last edited by
                                        #51

                                        @Rainman

                                        In my family, the sons were the royalty, and the daughters were the maids and outdoor workers. Really, this happened in every family on my mother's side of the tree.

                                        My brother thought everything was owed to him, but I learned to work. That included school work, too.

                                        That's how I could buy my motorcycle and freedom during my teens. I wasn't home much during those years. I loved my little Honda.

                                        MikM 1 Reply Last reply 25 Jun 2020, 16:52
                                        • C Online
                                          C Online
                                          Copper
                                          wrote on 25 Jun 2020, 15:59 last edited by
                                          #52

                                          I have a brother and 4 sisters.

                                          The girls always get everything.

                                          Which is only fair, since boys are bad.

                                          I'm kneeling as I type this.

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