Yet another clearing task after Hurricane Helene: get that cherry tree off the corn crib roof.
Sawing from the top –Gretchen Quarterman
It was a nice Prunus serotina, but it would not survive like that, and we could not leave it to cause more damage during the next big storm.
Cherry Tree after Hurricane Helene –Gretchen Quarterman
Fortunately, it did not actually puncture the roof.
It was pretty tall –Gretchen Quarterman
I do not like climbing on roofs. I do like a rope if I must climb.
Need a rope from the peak of the tractor shed roof –Gretchen Quarterman
My little finger is a sixteen-foot cypress pole from our cypress swamp. Light and long.
Used my little finger to get the rope –Gretchen Quarterman
There was a log more sawing to cut the top down to bits to toss aside and bigger bits for woodworking or firewood.
Top sawed off –Gretchen Quarterman
I was using an EGO electric 18-inch chainsaw. Very nice. No gas, gas lines, gas filter, carburetor, or air filter to clog up. And this model has a chain auto-tightener that lasts long.
Saw chunks small enough not to damage roof –Gretchen Quarterman
If you want some nice 10-12-inch cherry logs for woodworking, let us know.
Get limbs off the roof –Gretchen Quarterman
Grapevines and smilax vines took the most time.
Top leaning over more –Gretchen Quarterman
Almost done with the main trunk.
Saw the trunk from the ground –Gretchen Quarterman
Naturally the big piece leaned against the corn crib. But the rope worked to get it loose.
Used the rope to pull the big chunk away from the crib so it would fall –Gretchen Quarterman
There was more to do on the ground to get the bits out of the way.
Roof clear –Gretchen Quarterman
And the boat rack was for another day.
Boat rack needs fixing –Gretchen Quarterman
-jsq
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