The Hackberry Tree and a guy with a chainsaw

Joined
Jan 6, 2005
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9,753
Location
Alabama
This is the work I have accomplished on my in-laws' fallen Hackberry tree since I started cutting on it in August. In the first picture I had already cut approximately 20' out of the top of it. Pic 2 was a few weeks back where I had managed to get all the smaller limbs cut, and pic 3 was after a lot more cutting yesterday and a whole lot of hauling away today. All wood is being hauled to either the road or the burn pile in one of those cheap beach carts you can find at Walmart, pulled behind my FIL's Bad Boy zero turn. It's a slow process but I'm getting there.

Hackberry-1.webp
Hackberry-2.webp
Hackberry-3.webp
 
( Not trying to "one up" you! )

When hurricane Rita hit in 2005, 14 mature trees fell on my acre lot. 10 were pines and 4 were oaks. It looked like a bomb went off in my yard. The largest one was a huge pine about 20 feet directly in front of my front door. The thing had to be 60 ft. tall if not more. Trunk was 2.5 ft. in diameter. Thank God it fell away. Since so many people were like me, you just could not find tree services for the next 6-9 months. So, I started the cleanup with a medium size, 16" Craftsman chainsaw. Neighbors literally laughed at me for tackling the job by hand.

They asked me how could I possible do it, I told them "one downed tree at a time". It took 2 months, five or six new chains, and another chainsaw after mine gave out. My back and arms ached continually. Hopefully, never again!

1758509214187.webp
 
( Not trying to "one up" you! )

When hurricane Rita hit in 2005, 14 mature trees fell on my acre lot. 10 were pines and 4 were oaks. It looked like a bomb went off in my yard. The largest one was a huge pine about 20 feet directly in front of my front door. The thing had to be 60 ft. tall if not more. Trunk was 2.5 ft. in diameter. Thank God it fell away. Since so many people were like me, you just could not find tree services for the next 6-9 months. So, I started the cleanup with a medium size, 16" Craftsman chainsaw. Neighbors literally laughed at me for tackling the job by hand.

They asked me how could I possible do it, I told them "one downed tree at a time". It took 2 months, five or six new chains, and another chainsaw after mine gave out. My back and arms ached continually. Hopefully, never again!

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You followed the "eat an elephant one bite at a time" philosophy, the same one I have been following with this tree. I'd have finished it long ago if it were at my place, but this is at my in-laws' house, so I have to do it in 2-3 hours blocks of spare time.
 
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