Eli really knows how to do it! Good for him, he has skills that will serve him for a lifetime and can pass on. Awesome! I always enjoy watching loggers do their work. It's dangerous, but essential. Thanks for sharing, Wily!
Great video, Wily. The twelve year old impressed me. He will be able to get a job in the log woods any time. Thanks for sharing and have a great week!!
I start at 10 years old running 966 cat loaders and excavators. By 12 I was running mixers and dump trucks. I love this video. Touches my heart to see a young man out there
We’ve got to have more kids learning younger like this, earlier they start, the less mistakes they’ll make later on- they’ll learn to respect the machinery and how to work on these beautiful tractors
Thanks for another great video Wiley. It was really interesting and enjoyable to watch. Thanks for showing us this logging operation. I found that most interesting seeing the different pieces of equipment actually working. Feel free to do some more of that anytime. Was super interesting. That young man being 12 years old, looked like an older operator that had been at it for years. He did great for being 12 years old. Proud of that young man. Thanks for showing that to us Wiley. I was impressed!!!!!! Hire that young man in a minute. Appreciate you taking us along Wiley. Was super interesting. The Iowa farm boy. Steve.
The sights and sounds remind me of my logging work. Seeing that youngman run the iron like that will take him far in his working career too!! Thanks wiliey
I know it takes a little more gumption to try something new, the older we get. Thanks for giving us a different perspective on the the world/life. Great video Wishing you much success my friend!
You have a different way of logging across the pond from here in the uk , we mostly use the harvester to fell and crosscut to required lengths then take out to roadside with the forwarder for the trucks to load themselves 😊
I wish him all the success in the world. This is dangerous and expensive work. A change in politics can bankrupt an operation like this. Batteries, tires, hydraulics are always needing money. Thanks for the ride along from Montgomery Al.
We had a bell cutter back in the 80s no telling how many tons of lumber was layed on the ground and i mean swamps not this dry ground we went with that deere equipment where they said it wouldnt go
My 10 year old daughter was running my 648g3 when she was 11 she is 14 now and he'll on wheels make a drag clean up at the delimber and keep the set clear
My Dads crew was all family. Most every time we hired “outside”they turned into a dud. Had several that never showed back on a job site for their second day. Got a nephew that started his kids on a skid-steer at 10 yrs old…..now, at 15, his son would likely win an equipment rodeo. 🫡
Ive known for yeare that logging varied regionally in the United States. Even gyppos in the Pacific Northwest of my era, 70s and 80s, wore tin hats, boots and long pants and gradually adopted safety measures used by union loggers for years (face shields, chaps, ear plugs, satety vests and so on.) I am quite surprised at the casual way Southern Loggers approach the risks and hazards of their of work. No hard hats or orange vests, frequently loggers wearing shorts and tennis shoes, no gloves or face shields. These simple satety measures are marginal costs but prevent costly and possibly debilitating injuriee. Why are they not used?
Wily I use to work for a grading contractor in Fancy Gap VA we use to cut our on right of way. I loved to get into a patch of white pine we would notch and cut them part of the way and we would cut a row of the and fall the whole bunch at one time.
i would hire that kid any day over a any one graduateing from kollage any day to run any equip my own son built his very frist 4 acre pond dam with our heavy equip as i had jus had a neck surgery i sat under a shade tree back then to watch ,,,worked every day like a grown man at 13 years old ,,now he runs the entire company
We dont have as many running as we use too. I believe in the early 90 s we had 300 bells with dangle heads south of Montgomery working in Alabama. Them the others caught up With shear heads and Thinning pine plantations is where they thrived
Gnats lol my grandad worked supervisor for fruit company in FL all his life i can remember when i was 5 or 6 it was hot and we were in the Grove gnats were terrible i kept swatting them complained about gnats he got his pocket knife out and cut hole in seat of my pants and laughed said now they will go to your butt and laughed and went about his business lmbo
Nice to see how they logout the Timber! What type of pine are they harvesting Wiley? How soon will the open area be re-planted ? Where do they source the replants from? Thanks!
I was 15 when i got paid to run a skidder for my dad but i knew how to run it way before then I ran a skidder off bluff at 15. Thats why i have a limp today
It REALLY IS impressive what the love, respect and development of purpose can do for young men AND young women!!
Eli really knows how to do it! Good for him, he has skills that will serve him for a lifetime and can pass on. Awesome! I always enjoy watching loggers do their work. It's dangerous, but essential. Thanks for sharing, Wily!
Thanks for watching.
So glad to see young men ,willing to work and learn ,not to be afraid .
Wow the 12 year old knows what's he doing he done a great job this was a good video Wily thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching. He is the real deal
Great video, Wily. The twelve year old impressed me. He will be able to get a job in the log woods any time. Thanks for sharing and have a great week!!
Absolutely. Tigercat should sponsor this kid and others like him
I start at 10 years old running 966 cat loaders and excavators. By 12 I was running mixers and dump trucks. I love this video. Touches my heart to see a young man out there
We’ve got to have more kids learning younger like this, earlier they start, the less mistakes they’ll make later on- they’ll learn to respect the machinery and how to work on these beautiful tractors
wouldnt it be awesome if most kids had people willing to throw them on equipment!
thanks for all your hard work providing the wood to keep america humming.
Great Video, hats off to Eli, good kid.
Thanks for another great video Wiley.
It was really interesting and enjoyable to watch.
Thanks for showing us this logging operation. I found that most interesting seeing the different pieces of equipment actually working. Feel free to do some more of that anytime. Was super interesting.
That young man being 12 years old, looked like an older operator that had been at it for years. He did great for being 12 years old. Proud of that young man. Thanks for showing that to us Wiley. I was impressed!!!!!! Hire that young man in a minute.
Appreciate you taking us along Wiley. Was super interesting.
The Iowa farm boy. Steve.
I agree with you about that kid. He took off after the biggest trees
He was the real deal
The sights and sounds remind me of my logging work. Seeing that youngman run the iron like that will take him far in his working career too!! Thanks wiliey
This kid has it
Thanks for another great video, and enjoyed watching the operations of logging.
Thanks 👍
Hello wily loved the video enjoyed watching and listening I learned some things about logging thank you ken
Thank you , Ken
Farm kids learn how to work and make a living early also. We need more of this.
I agree
I know it takes a little more gumption to try something new, the older we get.
Thanks for giving us a different perspective on the the world/life.
Great video
Wishing you much success my friend!
Starting helping my dad when I was 10, running a crawler and wheel tractor
Thanks for sharing
You have a different way of logging across the pond from here in the uk , we mostly use the harvester to fell and crosscut to required lengths then take out to roadside with the forwarder for the trucks to load themselves 😊
Need more boys of twelve to get into the industries to keep the job going into the future
I agree
Very nice job and God bless y'all
Thanks
I wish him all the success in the world. This is dangerous and expensive work. A change in politics can bankrupt an operation like this. Batteries, tires, hydraulics are always needing money. Thanks for the ride along from Montgomery Al.
Thanks
This kid has got the skills
We had a bell cutter back in the 80s no telling how many tons of lumber was layed on the ground and i mean swamps not this dry ground we went with that deere equipment where they said it wouldnt go
That's my family's crew. The 12yr old is my nephew
He was something to watch. TigerCat should sponsor him now
Thank for taking us along wiley!
Thanks for coming along
In England you have to be thirteen to drive a tractor for farm/forestry work. I guess it’s different in the USA.
My 10 year old daughter was running my 648g3 when she was 11 she is 14 now and he'll on wheels make a drag clean up at the delimber and keep the set clear
Is family exempt? This kid is a family member. None paid too
@@DBW4Starts don't even worry about it try and leave him home and he will. Be sneaking into the crew truck. Ask me how I know
My Dads crew was all family. Most every time we hired “outside”they turned into a dud. Had several that never showed back on a job site for their second day. Got a nephew that started his kids on a skid-steer at 10 yrs old…..now, at 15, his son would likely win an equipment rodeo. 🫡
Ive known for yeare that logging varied regionally in the United States. Even gyppos in the Pacific Northwest of my era, 70s and 80s, wore tin hats, boots and long pants and gradually adopted safety measures used by union loggers for years (face shields, chaps, ear plugs, satety vests and so on.) I am quite surprised at the casual way Southern Loggers approach the risks and hazards of their of work. No hard hats or orange vests, frequently loggers wearing shorts and tennis shoes, no gloves or face shields. These simple satety measures are marginal costs but prevent costly and possibly debilitating injuriee. Why are they not used?
Been that way for years I wear steel toed boots and green or orange t shirt. Only time only wear a hard hat when I'm in the mill.
It is mostly mechanized down here
Insurance man comes around he probably wonders how they keep the safety equipment so clean
You don’t need safety wear when you work safely and professionally and have common sense
Great video. Hope OSHA doesn't see this.
No wimpy kids these kids like this is what america is about
That's how the kids learn put them in it let them go my son is forth generation excavation contractor
That 12 year old is smarter than my son-in-law , he got Fired from a Lawnmowing job at a cemetery !😂
100% Truth !
😂. Geez. I don’t even know how to respond. Thanks for sharing
who complained?
@@haynillesen The corpses resting in their wooden overcoats , he wasn't cutting the grass nice enough 😂😂😂.
Reminds me of the 80s i was driveing 648ds 640ds 544bs 544cs 544ds 544es and everything from a 4020 to a 4840 to the newer tractors 4955s to the 8400s
Those were the days.
Wily I use to work for a grading contractor in Fancy Gap VA we use to cut our on right of way. I loved to get into a patch of white pine we would notch and cut them part of the way and we would cut a row of the and fall the whole bunch at one time.
Thank you for sharing that
Go with ur bad self young man was just like u in the 80s my dad taught me to drive it all
I needed the English translation on to understand them, but a good explanation!
Thanks for the adventure wily
Thank you
i would hire that kid any day over a any one graduateing from kollage any day to run any equip my own son built his very frist 4 acre pond dam with our heavy equip as i had jus had a neck surgery i sat under a shade tree back then to watch ,,,worked every day like a grown man at 13 years old ,,now he runs the entire company
All that wood is small compared to what we have on the west coast Oregon and Washington
Yeah the difference we can log it instead of letting it burn thought
Yea sir. Nothing like it.
Enjoyed you making the video
Thanks 👍
I have not seen a 3 wheeled feller buncher in forever
I saw a bell the other day with saw bar
We dont have as many running as we use too. I believe in the early 90 s we had 300 bells with dangle heads south of Montgomery working in Alabama. Them the others caught up
With shear heads and Thinning pine plantations is where they thrived
@@DBW4Starts saw one with tracks in a video the other day pretty cool
just awesome
Thanks
@@DBW4Starts anytime Wiley
Gnats lol my grandad worked supervisor for fruit company in FL all his life i can remember when i was 5 or 6 it was hot and we were in the Grove gnats were terrible i kept swatting them complained about gnats he got his pocket knife out and cut hole in seat of my pants and laughed said now they will go to your butt and laughed and went about his business lmbo
A real good video alittle of everything
Thank you
Nice to see how they logout the Timber! What type of pine are they harvesting Wiley? How soon will the open area be re-planted ? Where do they source the replants from? Thanks!
Probably will replant jan- feb 2025. I think it was Slash. Maybe some loblolly
a lot of my mates went into timber, all chain saw,s back then, I went into construction
I was like your mates. You made the right decision 😂
Boy don't need to talk when he is that good my girls were on my stuff when they were young
12year old with 6years experience
Yes
Very interesting 👍
Thank you
Ty wiley
How many years have you been in logging wily you are very knolageble
I was 15 when i got paid to run a skidder for my dad but i knew how to run it way before then
I ran a skidder off bluff at 15. Thats why i have a limp today
Dam good video thanks who delim the trees and how
Do they replant the land after clearing the trees and how long does it take to regrow the trees.
They do. I would estimate it would be 12-15 yr for first thinning
What model was the Timbercat feller buncher? Thanks. Take care.
720. I think
Is that Wiley
👍👍👍
I wonder, (honestly), how many trees/forests are left?
More than we had 100 years ago. Not as big but more stems per acre than ever. Thanks to reforestation programs
@@DBW4Starts but they plant all the same type.
Looks like the seat has seen better days.
The 12yr old is my step cousin, his name is Eligh
Thanks for sharing. He is the real deal on that machine
Yes, if i was a boss, i would fire anyone who marks up a machine
Big saw.
Sure leaves the land a mess…
It will be replanted in plantation pine in 10 years you won't be able to tell
Like he said. In 10 yrs you will never know
Thats a vidoe game want to play
It's all Greek to me 😊
Thanks for watching anyway
25th 😊
Probably cant even add oil or anything realistic😂😂😂😂😂😂
Moore Ronald Taylor Kimberly Robinson Michelle
Robinson Margaret Martin Susan Johnson Matthew
Good recipe for a bad back when you get older.
Thanks for sharing
Perez Donald Wilson Gary Lee Jeffrey
Clark Ruth Lewis Maria Lewis Ruth
DO YOU EVER FEEL BAD FOR LITERALLY BEING THE ONES TO STRIP THE LAND BARE AND KILL ALL THOSE TREES? OH WELL. PLANETS PROBABLY DOOMED ANYWAYS.
Did you not hear that was plantation tree's. You need to get your head out of your back end