Nothing pisses off a tradie more than buying a gallon of water and
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RAW DOG CREW LIEUTENANT
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP CREW
MUSTANG CREW
PISS IN SINK CREW
SHIT IN SHOWER CREW
MISCERS WHO LIFT CREW🔥 1Comment
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RAW DOG CREW LIEUTENANT
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP CREW
MUSTANG CREW
PISS IN SINK CREW
SHIT IN SHOWER CREW
MISCERS WHO LIFT CREWComment
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monster is pretty popular in trades, I drink a little coffee, use to a lot of monster. Caffeine pills are probably best if the energy is what you’re after🖕 1Comment
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Also drink coffee but that's because the girlfriend is a fucking caffeine fiend - got a stovetop coffee pot that will do the equivalent of like 8 shots. If we're both working on the same day we'll share a pot before we go our separate ways but then she'll make a second pot to carry with her in a Yeti flask she's got - if I'm not working and I'm sleeping she'll make a pot for herself then a second to carry. I think she drinks instant at her job too once the stuff she takes with her is goneRAW DOG CREW LIEUTENANT
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP CREW
MUSTANG CREW
PISS IN SINK CREW
SHIT IN SHOWER CREW
MISCERS WHO LIFT CREWComment
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I’ve been doing logging and some TSI(timber stand improvements) most recently, I do all kinds of stuff, from planting the seedlings to PCT to thinning to final harvests🟥 1Comment
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I'm not sure what you boys call things up there. Right now I've been building small fish structures to slow water and build a place for the fish to hide. Placing logs with my mini hoe.
Earlier we were moving root wads (I think this is what you boys call sinker logs? Idk though I'm stupid) for next year's bigger habitats.
Before that I was screening rock to make spawning grounds for all the fishes and restoring the area to what it was before it was mined for gold back in the 40s.👍 1Comment
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Nice, sounds like you've been doing it a while. Sounds like your main thing in the forestry aspect is cutter? I'm not saying that's all you do, but it's that your main thing?
I'm not sure what you boys call things up there. Right now I've been building small fish structures to slow water and build a place for the fish to hide. Placing logs with my mini hoe.
Earlier we were moving root wads (I think this is what you boys call sinker logs? Idk though I'm stupid) for next year's bigger habitats.
Before that I was screening rock to make spawning grounds for all the fishes and restoring the area to what it was before it was mined for gold back in the 40s.
yes I do mostly cutting, it pays the best but sometimes I will do silvaculture for people planting a few thousand seedlings here and there because it’s fun watching timber stands grow🟩 1🖕 1Comment
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That is sinker logs, it doesn’t necessarily slow the flow of water down, rather it percolates oxygen into the the water/ brooks where trout and salmon spawn. A lot of small crushed stone is good for a spawning bed and the rocks hold onto oxygen bubbles.
yes I do mostly cutting, it pays the best but sometimes I will do silvaculture for people planting a few thousand seedlings here and there because it’s fun watching timber stands grow
Nice bro, never done actual cutting, keep hearing how much these guys love it though. A lot more to it than just cutting a tree down. Right on forestry bro.👍 1Comment
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No one has explained it to me that way or said anything about sinker logs. Sounds a lot better than the shit I've seen and heard about what's going on here.
Nice bro, never done actual cutting, keep hearing how much these guys love it though. A lot more to it than just cutting a tree down. Right on forestry bro.
handcutting is a dying art most guys sit in the cab of a feller buncher or grapple skidder these days🟥 1Comment
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A digger log on the Fales River. Digger logs are used to help support an upstream riffle and create a downstream pool, which adds habitat diversity and benefits species such as salmon and trout.
Stupid000🟥 1👍 1Comment
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I assume that’s what you’re doing anyway, the logs should be placed at a 30 degree angle to, If you drill holes in them and use rebar to pound down into the brook bed they will stay there for decades. You want them pretty embedded as well, not so high that they will just trap debris on the brook, basically just a ledge for the water to shed off and tumble down “percolating”
handcutting is a dying art most guys sit in the cab of a feller buncher or grapple skidder these days
Yeah all the brain dead liberals are destroying our forests and jobs. Run into a lot of guys who have been pretty much pushed out of logging. Still quite a few cutters out here, but I hear about a lot of feller bunchers, skidders and processors, hear about those more during fire season though.Comment
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Out here it seems every government forest guy and engineer does it different. I've seen some of the stuff you're talking about, and I've heard of a bunch of different ways these guys have done it in the past. Where I am it seems more common to push over big trees with their root wads intact and dig holes and bury them partially along with racking and other logs. That's what we were skidding earlier for next year.
Yeah all the brain dead liberals are destroying our forests and jobs. Run into a lot of guys who have been pretty much pushed out of logging. Still quite a few cutters out here, but I hear about a lot of feller bunchers, skidders and processors, hear about those more during fire season though.🟥 1🔥 1Comment
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I learned this knowledge directly from DFO (canadas fish police/ conservation), I have never heard of pushing over big trees lol IMO that would erode the river bank faster, trees keep river banks in tact with their roots. But I mean I guess there’s several ways to skin a cat. But I think that would be a big no no here
edit: that's not a video, I'll read that in a few after i eat.
I'm not doubting a word you say at all, just telling you of my very limited experience bro.
Lol, these trees weren't pushed over near the river bro. I was told another company last year hauled these trees either up the mountain from somewhere else or from somewhere else on the mountain they pushed them over. Guess my company does this too and even sells the root logs. Hear this is common in Oregon.
Like a month ago we just skidded the root wad logs, all the other logs, racking, and rock we screened next to the river to be put in next summer.
What I'm doing now the government forest bro just cuts down trees for us to put in the river 7 trees a structure/habitat. And he doesn't cut the ones next to the steam.🟩 1Comment
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Just saw the video you posted, I'm gonna watch it in a minute.
I'm not doubting a word you say at all, just telling you of my very limited experience bro.
Lol, these trees weren't pushed over near the river bro. I was told another company last year hauled these trees either up the mountain from somewhere else or from somewhere else on the mountain they pushed them over. Guess my company does this too and even sells the root logs. Hear this is common in Oregon.
Like a month ago we just skidded the root wad logs, all the other logs, racking, and rock we screened next to the river to be put in next summer.
What I'm doing now the government forest bro just cuts down trees for us to put in the river 7 trees a structure/habitat. And he doesn't cut the ones next to the steam.
around here there’s suppose to be buffer zones around Brooks and rivers, the fish would never survive with full sun they need the shade plus the erosion etc sediment going into the stream
sounds like you got a nice gig
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Yeah buddy, your link was a good one. Pretty much right now we're putting in digger logs up stream from meanders, and building structures in meanders all in all about 7 trees and logs per structure. In the long straight stretches building riffles and cover for the fish. It's pretty lame, everyone seems to love cutting though, sounds like a lot more fun to me.Comment
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We had grunts operating the machines and doing the manual labour, much like the guys out in the forests operating the chippers and machines. Or the chainsaws (grunts).
A trade requires certified qualification. If you don't have a TRADE certificate you are not a tradie. A certificate to say you can cut down trees or operate a mig/stick welder doesn't cut it - not even close. A trade requires an apprenticeship.
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Last edited by Mulloway; Today, 01:34 AM.Comment
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