- Thread Starter
- #41
Ironman8
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2013
- Messages
- 928
Thanks. Most of the dead standing trees that I’m seeing out there are on the 6-8” diameter size that have fallen into another tree and were caught by the branches before it could fall completely over. I guess these are called snags.As a former sawyer, I can say there are many hazards to think about and addressing "hazard" trees. Different species of trees have different characteristics when it comes to falling on their own. Dead, standing lodgepole are pretty stable trees in terms of not breaking mid tree. Most tend to fall by the stump and root system rotting out. Live lodgepoles are limber and many will break under a snow load with any type of wind.
The problem with a hand saw or even an axe, is the back cut. Once you have your face (undercut) cut out, you want a fast saw on the back cut. When you are down to that last little bit of holding wood, that's the danger zone.
Would you (or anyone else reading) be concerned with trying to clear these or are they not much of a threat?
I know it would stick in the back of my mind the whole trip if we didn’t clear those, but I guess there’s also the risk that we cut the tree off at the base and it still doesn’t dislodge and only becomes more of a fall risk later on. Kinda damned if you do, damned if you don’t if it doesn’t break free.