How To Remove A Tree Stump. Quickest and Easiest Method!
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- Опубліковано 30 бер 2024
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I'm interested in how long "no time" is. Months, years?
Thanks, I do plan to give this a try. Stump grinding ain't cheap.
Depends on the species of tree and weather conditions. Oak may be a year. Pine may be 6 months.
@@CountryLivingExperience Thanks! I did see another vid where the guy used rock salt instead of epsom salts. It's cheaper so I might give that a try too. Plenty of stumps around here!
He'll yes
I rented a stump grinder a few months back and worked twenty five stumps in two days. Big oaks. About $900. Not cheap but they were done and gone.
@@andrewhanson5942 this isn't as good for the soil. Regular table and rock salt is going to poison that section of the lawn with sodium and chloride, whereas Epsom salt is made of magnesium and sulphate (*much* better for soil)
I want to give a little caution for people who are not very familiar with using chain saws.... the very tip of the saw (the rounded off part) is the most dangerous while the chain is moving.... if you dont put the bar into wood correctly it does what is referred to "bucking"... What that means is the chain saw will grab and uncontrollably swing upward. Some people have been seriously injured in their face from this. That is the purpose for the face shield on helmets that arborist use. Its not to keep shavings out of your face, its to give a buffer between the saw and your face in case the saw bucks on you.
Please be careful plunging the tip of the saw into anything. Learn proper techniques before attempting it.
Good point.
THANK YOU. I never knew that. And here I was saying I’m gonna cut the trees down myself and save money. If it bucked on me I’d end up spending more money injured, missing work time and a hospital bill…yikes.
Thank you. This answered my question as a new chainsaw user which directions say never plunge tip into wood. I was confused. Thx for posting this comment
@@tammysmith9727 you're welcome
It's called 'kick-back' not bucking. But yes, thanks for the cautionary tip!
Thank you so much for sharing! Have a blessed evening!
Thanks for the info @Country Living! Stay positive and blessed!
You’re welcome
I covered the trunk which was low to the ground and covered it with water softener pellets. I did this in the fall and it was gone the next spring. I also drilled holes in another one and put charcoal brickettes on top and poured the lighter fluid on it and let it burn. I did make sure to line around the trunk with rocks so it wouldnt spread and kept an eye on it. That worked faster. Epson salt is a good idea too.
Epsom Salts are good but Potassium Nitrate is better IF you can get it. I cannot get it up here in Canada. So I am stuck with Epsom salts.
You were very polite when referencing Wranglerstar's old vs current videos !!!
I would have not been so nice.
His "forest service" era and "dear beloved" era are equally good, just different. The latter is simply the evolution of a man realizing the charade we call government is merely that.
There's no reason you would have to be any less than nice when referencing it. His opinions may be at the edge of your ability to reason with, but that doesn't mean you would need to be disrespectful when talking behind a mans back.
From the pretentious name he chose to the general content of his videos, I never cared for the Wrangle crap.
@@dimik3855
Sounds an awful lot like a you problem.
@@dimik3855 As an old Psychiatrist, I can well understand that.
@@-LiveFreeorDie not everyone is a cultie
Back when I was a kid my dad used pigs too root stumps and remove em ! And the other benefit was we would fill the freezer in the fall !! Lol love the old days , and thank you for the video!!
Cool.
You're welcome
Precious memories
@@timothydempsey3763 how did it take for the pigs to eat them
💕💗💕 This really works, Thanks, love your content!!!
Perfect, I just cut down a big tree in my front yard. I was dreading getting rid of the stump until this video. Thank you!
You're welcome
Yes I have used a bottomless drum , it works great
Great info will have to try this better than digging the roots out.
Much less work for sure
I used this method many times, if I could recommend when doing the "checker pattern" to keep a "ring" of solid trunk around the circumference as to not let the salt escape through the lines cut it helps a lot more. It also collects water like you said and makes it go so much quicker keeping that salt and water in there breaking up the stump. I add more salt every so often as well
how long does it take the stump to decay?
Yesterday my wife spoke about getting rid of a stump. I said it would be easier for me to drill a bunch of holes and put something in them to kill it. 6 hours later this video shows up on my UA-cam feed. CRAZY!!!!!!!!!!👂👂
Cool
So this is true - your phone listens to you at all times & then places ads or appropriate videos in your feed. You can turn it off so it doesn't do that in the settings
@@worldpeace8187 can you tell me how please?
elon musk eveasdrops on your brain most likely
I have thought about something and a video will pop up. Eeeeeerie! 😱
Being a little ole lady I’ve tackled stumps I think successfully by cutting them down as close to the ground.Then using a pick ,mattock,I remove a lot more soil around the stump ,about 4 to 6 inches.Then once again I chainsaw down and now I’m below soil or ground level.I make Criss cross on top use my mattock,pick to cut any visible roots.Soak slowl whilst having a cuppa, so it’s totally flooded ,then I pour salt on top and a plastic bag or more on top and around then fill the hole and top with garden soil ! Grass grows over,this is quick and cheap and not visible within a season!
Good information. I use a sawzall and shovel to dig out the stumps and completely remove. Depending on the size this take me anywhere from 20 minutes to 2 hours. I do not have extremely large trees.
Good stuff. I am definitely going to try this method. Thanks, bro.
You're welcome
Bro?
I dug up five stumps last summer and have five more that I am going to dig up this summer. The stumps are over 25 years old. After I dug up the major part of each stump with a hand shovel, I put a long metal pole about 1 1/2" diameter into the stumps and wiggled it back and forth several different ways till the stumps came out of the ground. I am retired so I have all the time in the world to do this. Some of the stumps are hollow in the middle. I saved the wood from the stumps, dried the wood out and use it for campfires.
A digging chisel pole. Brilliant tool. Makes you feel like Arnold Schwarzenegger in the garden 👌
I have a big roots in my yard.I will try to do this. Thanks por you ideas. God bless you. Chao.😊❤
Glad it was helpful. God bless.
Five years ago I used a circular saw to cut the same type of checkerboard cuts into a fir stump. I didn’t use epsom salts because I didn’t know about this trick (thank you!). But I went out to check on the stump. Half of it crumbled away quite easily; the other half hadn’t rotted away as much. I used an axe, a sledgehammer, and a chainsaw to grind up the remaining stump. It took about 10 minutes, but it did come out in chip chunks.
I have removed two trees, one ( a pecan ) was cut down to a stump by a skill-less laborer in my neighbor's yard. The other - a china-berry - in my yard , I dug out about a foot into the soil at the root ball. Since the trunk was still about 12 ft. tall, I attached a come-along with a chain. One end as high ...about 10 ft up with the other end at the base of a living cedar several yards away. I filled the hole with water to soften the soil in the hole and then pulled the chain taught. As the tree began to lean, I used my chain saw to cut into the root ball main roots. The tree slowly tilted until it finally fell. This left a crater and the rest of the tree I cut into lengths of firewood. Back-filled the hole and used the extra firewood over the winter. It took a bit of effort but no delay for the stump to rot. This only works if there is another anchor tree nearby for an attachment point for the come-along.. I wish all success .
I wish you the best resurrection day and really want to thank you for this information. Getting out of debt now and then will save up for some land which will be wooded for sure, so for now I'm turning my waiting room into a classroom and learning as much as I possibly can. Appreciate you taking the time for these videos.
Blessings to you and yours
Kate
You're welcome. Happy Resurrection Day!
Glad you are getting out of debt.
I simply drilled holes in my with a long bit, doused it with lighter fluid, and lit it up. Done!
I have drilled many holes and filled with kerosene and lit it not gone yet
Some dummy planted an oak in the front flowerbed of my townhouse, which is about 12'w x 8'd. Not an option when the stump is 3' from my foundation.
In an area where it's dry and there's lots of humus ground fires can abound first it will smoulder and heat the ground as it spreads and create more ground fires
@@sarahmolzenhouse sorry about that, I meant to plant petunias. I always get those 2 mixed up.
It happened once and all you morons think it happens all the time.
Great idea. I luckily have access to a trencher so I would trench around while the stump was 4'-6' tall, then pull it over and out. Not everyone has what I do, so this is a great low equipment solution.
Thank you.
You are very blessed with that trencher for sure.
Thank you Sir for your very informative video. I’ll try your method. 🇨🇦💝🙏
You’re welcome
Dad taught me how to take roots out when I was a kid in WVa. Dig around the tree finding roots, cut them twice with an ax. After awhile the tree has little roots left, the weight of the tree, leaves and limbs, it'll fall over. Cut up for fire wood, fill the hole in with what you don't want. Works everytime!
Funny how this video shows up in my feed as I just rented an excavator to pull out 20 pretty large stumps. Roughly 24” one foot off the ground.
This is a good idea though for the average homeowner. 👍🏼
Thanks. I have 1 more stump left to remove and will try it your way.
Yep, I had a vo-ag teacher tell me this years ago.
Cool tip. I’m going to give this a try.
I did basically this to an oak stump. Deep grooves plus deep drill holes. Silly thing is still there 2 years later but at least it's soft ish now.
Good job budd thank you for posting it
A small warning for anyone with rocky soil where the stump is:
NEVER underestimate how shallow the original tree might have accommodated the rocks between its roots. As the tree and its roots grow, they can literally suck up (or displace, I guess) rocks to above the surrounding soil level.
I have literally destroyed chains by attempting cuts into the middle of a stump, only to find that there's one or more rocks hiding just a couple of inches beneath ground level.
This has even happened when performing a horizontal cut 2 or 3 inches ABOVE the soil level.
It's a trap for the unwary, and potentially could still happen in a field with very few rocks: guess where that ONE rock is going to be located? In the middle of your stump, that's where. True story.
Yep. Where I live this would sacrifice a chain every time.
Not in caliche soil in San Diego
Great info
Blessings ❤
Happy Resurrection Day!
Some larger trees can draw dirt up into the center well above ground. You can ruin a chain with that, and you cannot see it ahead of time.
Absolutely! After hitting a rock and ruining a new chain, I learned not to use this method.
I always keep a crappy chain for demolition purposes, I also use it to cut stumps off at the ground. The down side is usually such a chain is hard to sharpen and won't cut straight. But hey if it was a beater anyway. Important to note extra oil on your bar and don't get in a hurry.
The cost of a chain or two in comparison to the cost and hassle of renting a root grinder machine is insignificant, though.
No, you can not ruin a chain saw, maybe hurt the chain but that’s it. Don’t be silly.
@billnlpaw who in the hell said, "ruin a chain saw"?
I own 25 acres in Delaware county NY. For the past five years or so I’ve been felling trees to restore the view, make a yard, and create space for an orchard. When I’ve had a stump that becomes a problem I go old school and pull it via axe, shovel, and mattic. But I have a wedding party coming up so I had rented the Home Depot 13 horse grinder for the day (200$ including the insurance) well well worth it. Removed about a dozen stumps in a day deep enough to fill holes and plant grass over. But anywho, for the random stumps out of the way this is a great method too. Just beware of how deep you’re diving the bar. I’d say 30% of stump root balls are wound around a big rock at the center.
thanks boss gonna try this weekend
Another beneficial thing to that, looks like you're in freeze/thaw climate. over winter water will freeze in cuts and break it apart
It’s more fun to pour “go juice” into the grooves and light it. While the fire is getting started in the stump, cut the trunk into 3-4” thick rounds and place it on top of the stump. All the grooves allow plenty of airflow but the rounds on top contain the heat in the stump. Burns much quicker than if the heat escapes up away from the stump.
I also give the ground around the stump a good soak to reduce the likelihood of the fire smoldering underground along the roots.
Thank you for this info!!
You’re welcome
I actually used plain salt and it worked really fast
Awesome
Thank you brother.
You’re welcome
thanks, gona give it a go
Interesting 👍👵🏻👩🌾❣️
The town took down the beautiful maple in my front yard after Super Storm Sandy. It was in a small bern between my drive and front sidewalk and my gas line runs between it and the drive, so the tree guy didn’t want to grind the stump. I now have no shade at all in front of t and my cottage bakes. I’ve tried the drilling of holes and salt method, but it’s going to take forever for the stump to rot and there will still be substantial roots. I’d really like to plant a crêpe myrtle there. Any suggestions?
Dynamite technique there....gonna have to try that
Dynamite period
Thanks
I didn't see him using any dynamite...😊
If you're in a hurry, 2 things to speed you up: 1, bars and chains are very cheap and very well worth ruining to remove a few small stumps slightly below the ground. If you own old bars and chains, use them instead. 2. If you have many and/or big stumps, you can buy a stump grinder for about $1600, grind your stumps, and sell it for $200-$300 less than you paid. If you're not in a hurry, you can rot them out, but I have never seen burning work except in very dry climates.
I LIVE IN EASTERN N C ALONG 95 ,I HAD SIX STUMPS AND BURNING WORKED FINE
If you got old chains n bars laying around , use those sharpened up . I keep a new chain just for felling
Thank you.
Very helpful, thank you
You’re welcome
love your video ...nice and simple !
Thumb up ...
Thank you
Happy Easter 🐣 Good tip to know. Saved it to my Homesteading playlist.
Blessings to y'all.
Add 34-0-0.... nitrogen feeds the bacteria that breaks down methyl cellulose (wood fiber).... excellent video...
Cool. Thank you
LoL that yellow pine stump is going to rot out at a far different rate than a sweet gum tree...southern yellow pine stump can easily stay in the ground for 30 years...where do you Yankees come up with this crap? Yellow pine won't regrow there anyway...pour all the chemical stuff on there and watch that crap bounce off that yellow pine stump
real nice free-hand checker cuts.
Thanks
Thanks! I pour melted wax over my drill holes to prevent Epsom salt from becoming diluted
You’re welcome. I like your modification.
Put black cow or chicken castings over a stump, and it will compost quickly as well. Thanks for the content
And even grow some good mushrooms.
Does the cow have to be black?
@@martecooksey lol, it's a brand
I've been pulling one ton stumps out of the ground on an engineering project we have. Now I am really stumped because I have a triple stump which must be 3 tons, and too much for me. Also one oak stump next to a fragile stone wall. I have dosed the outer growing layer with RoundUp to stop any re-growth, but now I suppose I need to use your method, or maybe even try to burn them out. My stumps are all from 80-90 year old trees.
I am looking for denture adhesive. It’s all spelt right and everything. UA-cam sends me a video of how to remove a tree stump out of your yard. Wow UA-cam. I gave this video a thumbs up even though I didn’t watch it. I live in an apartment I do not have tree stumps, although I do have a very large bush with very stiff branches that could probably hurt somebody if they ever fell into it and it’s dead but it seems as though I need an act of Congress to get it removed. It’s very unsafe with all the children that are around and it’s right on the edge of the walkway. Everybody get blessed and stay safe.
❤️🙏🏻📖🙏🏻❤️!!!
Have a blessed day
I'd be more worried of someone fell onto one of the children milling about!
Hello. What's the approximate time frame, salt application to stump gone, using the checkerboard cut method? Thanks!
Nice ! Might just give these techniques a try!
Great video. I did not know about the use of Epsom salt. Just today I helped a buddy take down an old Aspen tree, and we were talking the stump removal, without hiring a tree crew with a grinder. When I'm back over there tomorrow, I will share your tip. Too bad you have to contend with some of the silly, snarky comments. Takes all kinds I reckon. Well done!! Stay safe.
Thank you.
I have gotten used to the snarky ones.....they are constant which is sad.
Appreciate it.
@@CountryLivingExperience I sent my buddy the link to your channel. Wanted him to see how you "checker boarded" the stump. Take care. Don't let the jerks discourage you.
@@rkf2746 Cool. Thanks
My technique, soak the ground & inject water using 1/2 copper type l, 5' long, turn the ground to mud, rig pull line, up high [for leverage] pull the tree down & chop up on the ground, you can get a lot of the roost at also!
Great tip and video
Thank you 🙏🏾
You're welcome
great info
Glad it was helpful!
" It just wants to live" nature rocks!
True
Your completely right about watching Wranglestars older videos because they were informative and entertaining before he got full of himself , big headed and closed minded.
I agree with you. Have you seen this stupid orange and red hats he is wearing now.
@@bigdaddy4197 I feel like you guys aren't getting the information he's passing on now.
@@raddlog I will have another look, but if he starts with those hats again I can’t hear what he is saying. Thanks.
ya , he went off the deep end ! Its amazing to me youtube hasn't shut him down with his ' act accordingly inciting civil unrest ' apparently Amazon is in a love relationship and loves giving him products to endorse and the money is flowing ! lots of money ! but since he openly came out of the closet with the vids he did with the Russians in the River .. lol.. he get a free pass on YT
what's he close minded about?
Will this stop grass from growing over there the stump was due to the salt?
Thanks
For those that are would like to see this process speed up. Follow this procedure and come back in 3 to 6 months. Drive wedges in starting near the edge. It will have the effect of breaking out a large percentage of the wood below ground level. For the remaining wood, if there is any, it will have the effect of opening the wood up below ground level and will accelerate decay of any of the remaining stump.
Drill a 2” hole down the middle and fill it full of ANFO. Add blasting cap and take cover.
That would be more fun but probably not possible where I live.
That is definitely a fast and effective way to do it.
Hi and thanks for the best video i have seen regarding my issue.
I have several very large (too large) shrubs that I'd like to get rid of. Being shrubs, the stumps are many but not much surface area. Also, I have one single large shrub that I would like to keep so I am concerned about damaging it as the roots af all are likely mixed in. Can you kindly offer any advice as to how to prevent killing the large shrub that i would like to save? Thanks very much.
You're welcome.
Unfortunately if you add too much salts to the top of the soil, it will not discriminate and it will likely kill the other shrub.
That seems like a lot of work. I like the burn barrel method mentioned by others. Back in the late 60's, my dad had a lot of dynamite for blowing stumps. I remember a stubborn stump that our little tractor wouldn't pull up. We dug a hole under it and put a stick under it. It just kind of went poof and didn't seem to do much, so we did it again. When that also didn't do much we put 5 or 6 sticks under it and it was raining chunks what seemed like for a while. lol. We had it stored in the barn and decided it was getting too unstable due to age, so, we set about throwing them with let fuses like hand grenades. Loads of fun.
nice, but unreal in city areas. you can't blow dynamite just like that. also not everyone can buy dynamite. also it can kill you.
Should have used them for fishing.
I would warn you against burning stumps as underground fries are extremely dangerous and uncontrollable. 😅
But it seems regards for personal and public safety is of little concern. 😂
@@Altriex. I would agree that in a dense forest you may have continuous burning underground, but if I have only one tree in an area, how is it supposed to travel to other wood underground to burn?
I had the same experience with dynamite during this time period. We needed to do some blasting so just drove to the dynamite store and bought as much as needed (plus blasting caps), no questions asked, not even an ID. I don't think it works that way now.
I take mine down to about a foot or so, pad a little round circular piece of wood to make it look like a mushroom and I have a nice little seat.
Would this work on palm tree stumps, as well? I have four of them in our yard.
I have a 1 acre lot that had close to 80 trees on it.
Half of them are mature white oak, long leaf pine, and hickory (+100ft.) I cut down half the trees on my lot.
The best method by far....
Cut the tree down to ground level.
Drill into the TOP of the fresh stump.
Add mycelium mixture to holes and water occasionally until rotting begins.
(You can try using compost as well)
Nothing can beat fungus on trees. You'll be able to dig out all your stumps within a year depending on the species.
Nice. I like it.
I like Wranglerstar’s latest stuff even more. But Ya’ll will catch on soon, we’re under attack.
@@denniskatinas We all do understand the majority of what he is talking about just not the solutions he is proposing. He has an unhealthy fear.
@@denniskatinas We are not under attack. We are supplying the weapons and diplomatic support for offensive attacks on another nation. The response to that is not unanticipated. It was intentionally provoked.
Can you eat the 'shrooms?
trying your method. do i have to put mulch on top of it
on smaller trees like the first 2 i just dig the root ball out with a pick shovel and digging bar and cut the surrounding roots with a as wall and just completely remove it i know its a lot more work but it makes it where the stump is complexly gone in one day and isn't going to grow back
checker board cut and plunged 12 inches deep and 4 pounds of epsom salt filled today. will report back
Thanks for sharing. I am curious how long it will be disappeared.
fantastic. thank you
You’re welcome
GreatVideo!!!! New Sub.
I have a fresh stump of a similar size in my yard and was wondering how the magnesium sulfate will affect my grass?
Remember a ski club member back in the 70's had an explosives license - clearing a lodge site he launched a few stumps that went tumbling down the hillside.
That sounds more fun.
Just pull it out and fill in!
I pulled 54 Douglas fir 🌲 stumps out of my backyard with a bobcat 50. Mini excavator and regraded.
I don’t use salt and pepper!
Wow. You are the coolest
try to do that with a southern pine that has a tap root 12 feet deep
Why didn't I think of that? Just buy an excavator!
You can use a hydraulic engine hoist to pull stumps.
Thanks.
Great tip, thanks. What is a very short time; months, weeks or years?
You’re welcome. 6 months for softwoods, 1 year for hardwoods depending on weather and epsom salt application.
Will this work for a really old pine tree stump??? Interesting! Thank you for sharing!
You're welcome. The high concentration of epsom salts will break down the lignin in the wood fiber faster. It may still work well on an old stump.
@@CountryLivingExperience Definitely worth the try!
I would drill holes in mine and pour old transmission fluid in first and then topped it off with oil. Let it sit a while.. at least a couple weeks (cover if it rains). When ready, just build a small burn pile around it. I've never had one that didn't burn down to the roots.
FYI, if you plunge your saw into that small stump, you're likely to hit earth.
@CountryLivingExperience, would the epsom salt "poison" the ground? I'm taking down a small crababble but want to replace it with another tree, which I'll plant near the stump (it's a small area in a bed, so I can't plant further away). Any issues with the salt compromising another tree if planted within days salt application?
It will take some time for the epsom salts to wash out of the soil after the crabapple is dead. Could be a year depending on how much rain.
Do you I have any 'after' vids showing a stump that epsom salts got rid of, say 6 months, a year, 18 months later?
I showed 2 after results in the video. Both were between a year and 18 months old.
Great video! How long does this process take ? I have a purple ash that is dying and needs to come down . It’s about 10-12 in diameter.
Thanks. Results vary on species and weather. The ones I showed are around 12 months old. About 6 months for softwoods and 12 for hardwoods.
Mix Epsom salt. Spent crankcase oil garden sulfur and crushed charcoal. Pour it in. After oil evaporates soaks in / light it up
That's great until the fire travels up the roots. Been there, done that, no thanks.
The “watch wranglestars older stuff” had me laughing out loud
Thanks
You’re welcome
I want to do this were I have pine stumps to expand my garden. Will I be able to plant in that spot after the stumps degrade, or will the MgSO4 contaminate the soil long term. I regularly use MgSO4 in fertilizer in minute amounts, so I was wondering if it would actually be good for the new plot long term.
It truly depends on how much epsom salts you put on over the course of time the stump is breaking down.
Thank you
You're welcome
Don’t forget to add Sodium Nitrate. Also as it will feed the rot microbes. Or a pile of manure.
Good suggestion
@@CountryLivingExperience
I personally prefer only sodium nitrate. And no Epsom salt any nitrogen source is ok. Keeping it damp. A pile of cow manure watered in. And covered with compost often in one year the stump will be gone. Reapplying in early fall will speed up the rot.
@@CountryLivingExperience 🦋🌿 Thank you, for sharing what you learned.
Just a tip to help prevent future growth. The tree growth is really happening at the outer edges of the tree. After cutting, paint/apply a broad spectrum herbicide along the edges of the stump. It works best in the late summer and fall when trees are taking nutrients down to roots. If working in the spring, I apply a second application in a week or two.
I live in a rented house in West Africa. It has a paved area at the back and these small trees kept growing through the concrete. I kept pulling them up until after 4 years I decided to plant one in the front garden. It grew so fast! Turns out it's a banyan. It's already large after just two years so sadly it has to go. 😢 Now al i need is a chainsaw.
Looks like a potentially good idea but also a good way to accidentally cur into dirt or rock and instantly dull a chainsaw. I think I'd prefer a 3/4" carbide drill bit on a large SDS drill.
How about Bradford pears and offspring does this work on these invasive trees?
I have never done it on a Bradford. It should work for all trees though.
How soon do you classify pretty quickly as far as making the stump implode. Are we talking a month two months?
6 months for softwoods. 1 year for hardwoods depending on climate.
Do I apply any water to it after the initial application, or let the dry salt do its thing?
He answered that in the video.
@@hernanserrano3464 Just add salt and walk away. No need to cover, wet, or monitor it.
@@CountryLivingExperience You know that rather punctures your claim that this is *the quickest* method. It may be the easiest, but I can grind a stump well within 6 months - with time to spare for another few!