Love the videos, starting to do some cutting and billing myself, just a quick question, are the mill guide plates you used in part 1 store bought or custom made? around how thick are they? i was thinking to jsut cut some 1/4" plate with the plasma cutter to help save on the project!!
Very good two part series. In video1, I was impressed by the two plates at each end of the log in which you placed your rails. I've never seen that before. I think that most efficient system I've seen for a chain saw mill.
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The side of the house with the newly milled lumber SURE LOOKS NICE!!! Great job you "good looking couple!" ha! ha! : ) Amen Retired, Veteran
One day i would love to meet an older gentleman who knows all that you both know about bldg our own home. It is so satisfying watching and learning. Thank you so much!!
Big guy, I really enjoy your teachings of the lumber word,great job. since I'm a human lover I would love to see you on your next video using your ear protection, you kind will appreciate it.
really impressive, really organised, well thought out and executed. i know from experience just what it takes to fell, mill and construct your own place. well done. subbed.
This is absolutely beautiful and mesmerizing to watch. I watched both videos, parts one and two and felt sad that there wasn't a part three! I've done a lot of carpentry and construction and I would LOVE to build myself a little log cabin in the woods somewhere, on some property that I own. My only fear is that after purchasing the property and and all tools and materials I need, and feeling that I have it "pretty much" all figured out, there's going to be some form of "Government Intervention" and new codes and regulations that charge me up the "ying yang" and basically bankrupt me! I have just about every carpentry, masonry, tile, plumbing tool there is for my project, and God knows I put them to good use renovating homes for OTHER people, but I don't have a SAW MILL!! I would REALLY love to rip some boards like this and build a small cabin, where I could "escape" to every once in a while and spend some quality time out in Nature! I have a question that's unrelated to this project, but I'm really curious. At around 2:30, there are some insects running around on the saw dust pile. They seem to be moving like ants, but they look far to big to be ants. Anyone know what they are? I like bugs, to a degree, and I'm curious as to what those bugs are.
It is definitely an amazing thing to have an escape in nature; especially if you've built it yourself! I say don't fear the man, get out and get started! In Ontario there are still many unorganized townships that would allow building without a permit or inspection (though I would still advise building to code as a minimum!)
You are very organized with your beautiful wood stacking and I love watching videos with logs used straight out of the forest! This is the first time seeing your project so I gotta go back and see how you began buying your own land and designing your own home. This must be so rewarding to experience cutting every log and milling right on your own property! I noticed that younger people are doing more of this kind of journey into becoming more sustainable by building their own homes! I can tell you that I would rather live in a home that was built with this much attention to details and having a wonderful place to live!
Hi Mae, yes, an incredibly rewarding process buying our wilderness property and building our own home. Unfortunately we didn't document the process. My hats off to those people are able to build their home AND share the whole process!
Lure of the North oh that's too bad that you didn't document your whole process of building your own home! I would have watched it completely all the way through it! I did go looking for more information about your home building but I couldn't find any and I thought maybe I didn't search it right. Thank you for your quick reply so I will still enjoy your channel with a wealth of knowledge!
I put a tarp down to catch hall the saw dust, also have a leaf blower that has suck function and puts the saw dust into a bag which make clean up easier, love your method of sobbing too dude👍🏽
always a good idea to strap a building before B/ batten siding , learned that the hard way.... specially with 14" boards that could shrink a fair amount and cup as well .
Dad built a weekend "chalet" cutting his own lumber, except he brought the logs to a local mill. Stacked and dried a long time. But they were not completely dry and shrunk a little, evident from looking at the floor from underneath. Circa 1975. That was quite a feat.
One good thing about the sawdust is you can put it on your garden and it makes for a good aerator it holds the moisture in the ground and really makes your vegetables grow
Awesome and again ty for posting. I see the idea and you're quite skilled. I can do that, i can use the saws and im a carpenter . Jack of all trades but, Master of most. I started in 87. Youre video inspired me thanks. Im moving to southern WV My home is well up on a mountain and I will have maybe 9 people on the street below. About 5000 acres behind me up on top. I have a few trees not too many, but solitude from the crazy world! Theres several large tree to use that will get me learning and ill use them for my home. :) You saved me from not having a plan. I know! IM NUTS! Thats why I am moving there. to settle my brain. But this is perfect to make a small living. You guys are cool ROCK ON! Chickens yep they will grow fat on caterpillars. Ticks ants anything that moves. And they taste good in garlic saute.
Thanks Walter! Good luck in your new venture! Chickens sound like a great idea to keep the caterpillars down. Fortunately there were literally NONE this year. They go in waves and in cycles I suppose. Thankful for that this year! All the best,
I think those are gypsy moths, they will divower leaves and kill your trees. Seen a tape that goes around the tree keeps them from climbing and nesting.
You sold me on going forward with a Chainsaw Mill instead of waiting on saving for a bandsaw mill! On a separate note - Use BT to get those caterpillars, then spray the trees with neem oil late fall and/or early spring. You will get rid of them in a year or two ... otherwise they will just get worse
Wow... excellent video! I'm going to order my Alaskan Mill now that I've watched this. But wait there's more!!!! THAT IS KIELYN IN YOUR VIDEO!!!!!! SHE WAS AMAZING ON ALONE!!!!! :)
Well ! Both videos were really inspirational, so well organised, as you have to be doing this, I was a bit worried when you got between the log and the tree laying on the ground behind you, one slip and both your legs would be broken, and I think you cant afford the luxury of being out of action! Take care, I cant wait to start milling Oak trees !
Nice work. You have been very busy from the time you did part 1 of this video. What catches my attention is there is no waste wth your milling. That's so awesome. Enjoyed this video very much. Glad i found this. Thanks very much. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Loved your video. I'm in Spring Bay on the island. I just milled some live edged cedar this spring for my bathroom. It is now dried and planed, and now I know how to make my straight edge for the floor and ceiling boards. I assume you guys live there year round. If you do, I'll give you a tip for your garage in a bag sheds. I go to princess auto and buy the heavy duty hay tarps. Silver in one side and black on the other. As we all know the shed coverings degrade and I throw the tarp over top and clamp them on at the doors with c clamps and 2 little pieces of 2x4. Silver for summer and black side for the winter. The sun will heat up the tarp through the snow and liquify it. For the most part the snow slides off the shed on its own.
I learned alot! Thank you for all the work you put in to producing this video. I subbed, and am looking forward to watching more of your videos. Cheers
That sawdust can be beautiful garden compost in a few years. Mixing with some organic soil and/or mushroom will speed the process. Great video. Really like the end clips for holing the square tubing. Thank you.
Great video. I just came back to watch it again and was surprised to realize you wife Kielyn is on Alone. I was like hey she looks familiar. Have been pulling for you.
Tremendous video. I have a similar mill and saw, less youthful energy than you, but this is so encouraging. I'm really motivated by seeing your work. I'm in the s.w. Missouri, central US, I have oak/hickory hardwoods, but other than tree species, lots of similarities. I'm a new subscriber and again really thank you for posting this, well done!
Portion of Septic waste may be combined with high carbon material like wood chips from Chainsaw mill to create great soil dressing and eliminate some problems associated with the outhouse thing :-)
Make some briquettes from the sawdust using a flour/water mix as a binder, homemade press, and you've got great smelling slow burning fuel cells. Love the vid's and what you are both doing.
I really love your video , it’s really fantastic... I learn a lot from it and I love your shower cabin...please make more videos so I can learn again....
Your shower stall is nice , when you said you didn't have to butt the slabs together I thought (peep show) . just kidding. Ask your wife to do a demonstration video of the new shower. Just kidding again . I gotta find a woman !!
When i buy my own house i am going to build stuff as well. Looking into the mountains only cause i like it better and i can have the space i need to get away from the city awhile and smell the trees lol
I love what you do. It seems to me that you have a lot of passion on what you do but, I am curious, what kind of chain saw and what kind of engine is that?
Great video and work. Quick thought though, could you seeing as you're cutting thin lumber from this log just cut live edge lumber, then use a track or guided skill saw to process them into boards? To save wear and tear on your chainsaw as well as rolling the log and spending time squaring it?
Yes, definitely you could do it that way, and with smaller logs I do sometimes. But with bigger logs, I find it worthwhile to square with the chainsaw. Its faster than a circular saw, and knocking back some of the girth of the big logs makes cutting the rest of the boards faster (and easier on the saw) as well.
@@lureofthenorth Hey cool, thanks for the reply. I didn't think the chainsaw would be faster, but now that I think about it, it makes sense as you are processing all the lumber you produce at once and would eliminate the extra handling.
Put a tarp down and use the sawdust for fuel to heat a shed or your house. Buy a pellet making machine to turn the sawdust into pellets for heat. Just an idea if your going to keep producing dust.
A trick I've found which works to protect selected trees/structures from army (tent) caterpillars, at least to some extent: make a stripe of grease (bearing grease, Vaseline, etc.) maybe an inch or two wide completely around the upright(s) (fruit tree trunk or whatever). The caterpillars will not cross the grease - you can sometimes see a four to six lane superhighway of caterpillars marching around and around the lower margin of the stripe, trying to find a way to climb higher without getting their feet "icky". We've managed to protect a plum, apple and cherry tree this way in our yard in town. Out in the woods, too many would dribble off adjacent trees to make this practical unless the trees to be protected were in the middle of a clearing. My grandfather showed me this trick when I was a young boy, demonstrating on some big oaks he had in his back yard.
@@kevinolson1102 But what about the ones hatched in a tree where the moth laid the eggs . how do you get rid of them. I know that you protected your fruit trees , but.?
Part 1: Making the cant: ua-cam.com/video/zqg_MVbe4Wg/v-deo.html
Love the videos, starting to do some cutting and billing myself, just a quick question, are the mill guide plates you used in part 1 store bought or custom made? around how thick are they? i was thinking to jsut cut some 1/4" plate with the plasma cutter to help save on the project!!
you need to impregnate this girl man, she is fucking amazing
women like her a rarities nowadays
HOW IT IS CALLED. Тhanks?
@@manlystyleunder50 That's a bit forward, isn't it?
@@futureboy7653 id give her triplets
love watching all the worms in fast motion lol.
I was hoping someone else noticed this
What's with those worms?
Great Job, for a One Man Show!!!......House Looks Great!!!
It’s nice to see you and your friend getting along so well, not often do you see such a happy couple working together!
Excellent!
Thank You!
Best wishes from Montreal!
Honestly this was very educational , the pointer about letting the wood dry while the wood is alredy put on the house is very useful.. cheers
There will always be dorks who criticize what ever you do so tell them to stick their heads where the sun don't shine. Good videos thanks.
Thanks for the video! You just saved me a ton of work and a bunch of cash! God bless!
That cart with the extra long handle is a brilliant idea.
Very good two part series. In video1, I was impressed by the two plates at each end of the log in which you placed your rails. I've never seen that before. I think that most efficient system I've seen for a chain saw mill.
Looks like your living the dream. Good for you!
great video on building a cant, and one gorgeous creature at 7:52 , you're a lucky man !!!
WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The side of the house with the newly milled lumber SURE LOOKS NICE!!!
Great job you "good looking couple!" ha! ha! : )
Amen
Retired, Veteran
Wow every bit of this is absolutely awesome, thoroughly impressed, thank you for making the video!
Das beste was ich je gesehen habe von Kettensägemühlen ein sehr geniales Ding 👍
One day i would love to meet an older gentleman who knows all that you both know about bldg our own home. It is so satisfying watching and learning. Thank you so much!!
Big guy, I really enjoy your teachings of the lumber word,great job.
since I'm a human lover I would love to see you on your next video using your ear protection, you kind will appreciate it.
You'll be happy to check out my latest milling vid then!
really impressive, really organised, well thought out and executed. i know from experience just what it takes to fell, mill and construct your own place. well done. subbed.
Chainsaw plus sweat 💦 plus imagination = house and home for a family. Marvellous!
This is absolutely beautiful and mesmerizing to watch. I watched both videos, parts one and two and felt sad that there wasn't a part three! I've done a lot of carpentry and construction and I would LOVE to build myself a little log cabin in the woods somewhere, on some property that I own. My only fear is that after purchasing the property and and all tools and materials I need, and feeling that I have it "pretty much" all figured out, there's going to be some form of "Government Intervention" and new codes and regulations that charge me up the "ying yang" and basically bankrupt me! I have just about every carpentry, masonry, tile, plumbing tool there is for my project, and God knows I put them to good use renovating homes for OTHER people, but I don't have a SAW MILL!! I would REALLY love to rip some boards like this and build a small cabin, where I could "escape" to every once in a while and spend some quality time out in Nature! I have a question that's unrelated to this project, but I'm really curious. At around 2:30, there are some insects running around on the saw dust pile. They seem to be moving like ants, but they look far to big to be ants. Anyone know what they are? I like bugs, to a degree, and I'm curious as to what those bugs are.
It is definitely an amazing thing to have an escape in nature; especially if you've built it yourself! I say don't fear the man, get out and get started! In Ontario there are still many unorganized townships that would allow building without a permit or inspection (though I would still advise building to code as a minimum!)
Oh, and the bugs crawling all over the place are tent caterpillars. They are cyclical, and last year was a bad year for them!
@@lureofthenorth Thank you for the reply! I really appreciate it!!
Very helpful and video was well done. Right to the point made the process more enjoyable. Thank you
JUST SAW YOUR SITE...BOTH...1&2...WELL DONE...
love your place! you have a real nice setup. thank you & good luck!!!
Thank you for the education. And thank you for the extra views. Very, very nice. lol A normal guy. Take care.
I don't know why, but this is fun to watch. Thanks for showing us!
I've stumbled on a great channel today thanks guys
You are very organized with your beautiful wood stacking and I love watching videos with logs used straight out of the forest! This is the first time seeing your project so I gotta go back and see how you began buying your own land and designing your own home. This must be so rewarding to experience cutting every log and milling right on your own property! I noticed that younger people are doing more of this kind of journey into becoming more sustainable by building their own homes! I can tell you that I would rather live in a home that was built with this much attention to details and having a wonderful place to live!
Hi Mae, yes, an incredibly rewarding process buying our wilderness property and building our own home. Unfortunately we didn't document the process. My hats off to those people are able to build their home AND share the whole process!
Lure of the North oh that's too bad that you didn't document your whole process of building your own home! I would have watched it completely all the way through it! I did go looking for more information about your home building but I couldn't find any and I thought maybe I didn't search it right. Thank you for your quick reply so I will still enjoy your channel with a wealth of knowledge!
Beautiful board & batten building!
If you put a tarp on the ground you can collect the saw dust and dry it and use it as insulation in a shed floor for example..
Great video, thanks!!! Brotha, your wife is SMOKIN'!!!!! Cheers
You got that right!
I put a tarp down to catch hall the saw dust, also have a leaf blower that has suck function and puts the saw dust into a bag which make clean up easier, love your method of sobbing too dude👍🏽
Awesome video, was wondering how to start with this cutting system . thank you for your time. Thanks for your time and teaching.
Great video, you all look very happy =)
This was awesome to watch. Thank you
Very nicely done
always a good idea to strap a building before B/ batten siding , learned that the hard way.... specially with 14" boards that could shrink a fair amount and cup as well .
Dad built a weekend "chalet" cutting his own lumber, except he brought the logs to a local mill. Stacked and dried a long time. But they were not completely dry and shrunk a little, evident from looking at the floor from underneath. Circa 1975. That was quite a feat.
One good thing about the sawdust is you can put it on your garden and it makes for a good aerator it holds the moisture in the ground and really makes your vegetables grow
There’s a fair bit of bar oil in chainsaw dust. Probably better not to use on veggies.
Awesome and again ty for posting. I see the idea and you're quite skilled. I can do that, i can use the saws and im a carpenter
. Jack of all trades but, Master of most. I started in 87.
Youre video inspired me thanks.
Im moving to southern WV My home is well up on a mountain and I will have maybe 9 people on the street below. About 5000 acres behind me up on top. I have a few trees not too many, but solitude from the crazy world! Theres several large tree to use that will get me learning and ill use them for my home. :)
You saved me from not having a plan. I know! IM NUTS! Thats why I am moving there. to settle my brain. But this is perfect to make a small living.
You guys are cool ROCK ON!
Chickens yep they will grow fat on caterpillars. Ticks ants anything that moves. And they taste good in garlic saute.
Thanks Walter! Good luck in your new venture! Chickens sound like a great idea to keep the caterpillars down. Fortunately there were literally NONE this year. They go in waves and in cycles I suppose. Thankful for that this year! All the best,
You manage lumber the same way I did. Never saw anyone do it this way except me.
You need chickens for those caterpillars.
Best anwser , Seeking out there nature enemy's.
I think those are gypsy moths, they will divower leaves and kill your trees. Seen a tape that goes around the tree keeps them from climbing and nesting.
Where can I get those measuring gage to buy on is the real name
Thank you for explaining the technique used in using green boards as siding.
Superb - really enjoyed the video. Sitting in my UK suburban home dreaming of the lifestyle!!
One day when I retire!
You sold me on going forward with a Chainsaw Mill instead of waiting on saving for a bandsaw mill! On a separate note - Use BT to get those caterpillars, then spray the trees with neem oil late fall and/or early spring. You will get rid of them in a year or two ... otherwise they will just get worse
Just found your channel. I enjoyed it very much.
Wow... excellent video! I'm going to order my Alaskan Mill now that I've watched this. But wait there's more!!!! THAT IS KIELYN IN YOUR VIDEO!!!!!! SHE WAS AMAZING ON ALONE!!!!! :)
Well ! Both videos were really inspirational, so well organised, as you have to be doing this, I was a bit worried when you got between the log and the tree laying on the ground behind you, one slip and both your legs would be broken, and I think you cant afford the luxury of being out of action! Take care, I cant wait to start milling Oak trees !
Great vid, you are good at this!
Great video! Nice to see your work progressing nicely!
You both have done a fantastic job!!
Thanks Ron!
Nice work. You have been very busy from the time you did part 1 of this video. What catches my attention is there is no waste wth your milling. That's so awesome. Enjoyed this video very much. Glad i found this. Thanks very much. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Very impressive.
Loved your video. I'm in Spring Bay on the island. I just milled some live edged cedar this spring for my bathroom. It is now dried and planed, and now I know how to make my straight edge for the floor and ceiling boards. I assume you guys live there year round. If you do, I'll give you a tip for your garage in a bag sheds. I go to princess auto and buy the heavy duty hay tarps. Silver in one side and black on the other. As we all know the shed coverings degrade and I throw the tarp over top and clamp them on at the doors with c clamps and 2 little pieces of 2x4. Silver for summer and black side for the winter. The sun will heat up the tarp through the snow and liquify it. For the most part the snow slides off the shed on its own.
I learned alot! Thank you for all the work you put in to producing this video. I subbed, and am looking forward to watching more of your videos. Cheers
Beautiful work! Makes me want to get up to our property and get to milling.
Excellent teaching.
Nice work there. Thanks. I'm about to borrow a mill to try my hand at it.
I saw what you did and I'm impressed with your lumber
Interesting site and impressive work. Btw what are the insects I see crawling on your wood and sawdust ?
I'm excited!! Can't wait to try it
Absolutely beautiful! Can't wait to get everything in this week to start doing this myself. Love it
That sawdust can be beautiful garden compost in a few years. Mixing with some organic soil and/or mushroom will speed the process. Great video. Really like the end clips for holing the square tubing. Thank you.
100% incorrect, you clearly have no idea what you are talking about
manlystyleunder50 Whats you reasoning?
manlystyleunder50 Well, why don’t you correct him, mr. wise-guy?
Don’t be a dick and then not be able to back your shit up with proper information.
Thanks buddy. Hope your still doing good. Saw dust on the trail is a great idea. Got my saw today and awaiting my mills delivery by friday.
I'm really impressed at the quality of the boards that mill puts out, I know your a seasoned pro at it but them are nice boards!!
You could clamp those large 1 1/2 square stock you use on the first cuts to make a nice straight line to clean off the live edge.
Damn. To be young and strong again.
Thank you!
Thanks for showing the process. I got a Grenberg mill now and will start milling in my forest in Japan. Excited to see what I can do.
Excellent videos Brother
Loved your video, provides great motivation...
Thank you so much Larry! That is exactly what we are trying to do. Motivate people to get out and DIY! All the best and thank you for your support.
Great video. I just came back to watch it again and was surprised to realize you wife Kielyn is on Alone. I was like hey she looks familiar. Have been pulling for you.
Yeah, that's her, before she was famous :D
Tremendous video. I have a similar mill and saw, less youthful energy than you, but this is so encouraging. I'm really motivated by seeing your work. I'm in the s.w. Missouri, central US, I have oak/hickory hardwoods, but other than tree species, lots of similarities. I'm a new subscriber and again really thank you for posting this, well done!
I was taught to keep stickers close to end of boards to reduce splitting in.
you need some chickens roaming around ... they will fix those caterpillars !
Why do you not seal the ends before drying to l cracks ?
What was those bugs? Wow.
Got it. Lol.
Good show.
They're tent catapillars
Portion of Septic waste may be combined with high carbon material like wood chips from Chainsaw mill to create great soil dressing and eliminate some problems associated with the outhouse thing :-)
Great video!
Make some briquettes from the sawdust using a flour/water mix as a binder, homemade press, and you've got great smelling slow burning fuel cells. Love the vid's and what you are both doing.
I really love your video , it’s really fantastic... I learn a lot from it and I love your shower cabin...please make more videos so I can learn again....
Now that our snowshoe guiding season is wrapped up, we'll get more videos up soon(ish)!
Your shower stall is nice , when you said you didn't have to butt the slabs together I thought (peep show) . just kidding. Ask your wife to do a demonstration video of the new shower. Just kidding again . I gotta find a woman !!
I'm from northern Italy, nice adventure! very interesting things you do, congratulations great videos ;)
Nice looking lumber
All that saw dust can be mixed with Portland cement to make timbercrete
When i buy my own house i am going to build stuff as well. Looking into the mountains only cause i like it better and i can have the space i need to get away from the city awhile and smell the trees lol
Dave your a work horse
I love what you do. It seems to me that you have a lot of passion on what you do but, I am curious, what kind of chain saw and what kind of engine is that?
Stihl 880
Thank you.
Nice 👍 thanks for the video.
Looks fantastic !!
Beautiful video from the wood to the caterpillars to your companion. Subbed!
Saw dust is a useful product you can 11:27 make pellets from them to burn in your heating system
Good job , place looks great!
Thank you!
4:08 Powerwall. From Sun energy.
Behind a good man, is always a wonderful woman telling you what to do lol 5:1
Great video and work. Quick thought though, could you seeing as you're cutting thin lumber from this log just cut live edge lumber, then use a track or guided skill saw to process them into boards? To save wear and tear on your chainsaw as well as rolling the log and spending time squaring it?
Yes, definitely you could do it that way, and with smaller logs I do sometimes. But with bigger logs, I find it worthwhile to square with the chainsaw. Its faster than a circular saw, and knocking back some of the girth of the big logs makes cutting the rest of the boards faster (and easier on the saw) as well.
@@lureofthenorth Hey cool, thanks for the reply. I didn't think the chainsaw would be faster, but now that I think about it, it makes sense as you are processing all the lumber you produce at once and would eliminate the extra handling.
You can take the sawdust and burn it in a heater. Look up sawdust burning stove.
Put a tarp down and use the sawdust for fuel to heat a shed or your house. Buy a pellet making machine to turn the sawdust into pellets for heat. Just an idea if your going to keep producing dust.
thanks for the video, just curious how your fresh cut siding held up once it dried out i am considering doing the same.
Looks awsome
What the hell kind of massive bugs are crawling around in the sawdust at 2:25?
tent caterpillars; an infestation!
Thanks for the lessons. Can you use dried western red cedar for stickers on 8/4 burr oak slabs?
whats with all those bugs crawling around?
Caterpillars
They turn into Gypsy Moths, the caterpillars eat the tree leaves.
A trick I've found which works to protect selected trees/structures from army (tent) caterpillars, at least to some extent: make a stripe of grease (bearing grease, Vaseline, etc.) maybe an inch or two wide completely around the upright(s) (fruit tree trunk or whatever). The caterpillars will not cross the grease - you can sometimes see a four to six lane superhighway of caterpillars marching around and around the lower margin of the stripe, trying to find a way to climb higher without getting their feet "icky". We've managed to protect a plum, apple and cherry tree this way in our yard in town. Out in the woods, too many would dribble off adjacent trees to make this practical unless the trees to be protected were in the middle of a clearing. My grandfather showed me this trick when I was a young boy, demonstrating on some big oaks he had in his back yard.
This guy knows the right question to ask.
@@kevinolson1102 But what about the ones hatched in a tree where the moth laid the eggs . how do you get rid of them. I know that you protected your fruit trees , but.?
Wow. Impressive