Logging big timber in Alaska

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  • Опубліковано 4 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 261

  • @jsnbdr
    @jsnbdr 7 років тому +13

    Loggers rule! Big thanks to all the fellas past and present doing a real job.

  • @Mrcolincadorette
    @Mrcolincadorette 11 років тому +8

    i logged for two winters and it was some of the hardest and most dangerest work i have ever done hats off to the guys who do this year in and year out

  • @ragnarjonsson7320
    @ragnarjonsson7320 9 років тому +5

    Jerry knows his stuff, a true craftsman in my view.

  • @loghog4392
    @loghog4392 6 місяців тому +1

    I always had the cobbler put Tricounis on my corks and the faller in this video is the only other cutter that I've ever seen with Tricounis. Loved those things especially on steep and rocky ground. And he has a Mag-driver in his pouch. I like this guy.

    • @PaulMatthews-m1t
      @PaulMatthews-m1t 5 місяців тому

      2 on each side of the ball of your foot and three on the heel. That makes three of us.

  • @established_1803
    @established_1803 6 років тому +15

    gotta respect the American/Canadian loggers. they keep us with a roof over our heads.

  • @vdub4201
    @vdub4201 14 років тому +6

    Good ol stihl, i love the smell of two stroke in the morning.

  • @STEAMBOLTANNIE
    @STEAMBOLTANNIE 10 років тому +9

    Logged for years up north in B.C. Meziadin Used the 2100 husky 36 inch bar. No better job in the world. I miss it. Average butt diameter was 4 to 6 feet.

  • @187hoser
    @187hoser 14 років тому +3

    I like how he took his calculator off of his head to figure the weight of the log for the next cut. He is definitely a skilled logger.

  • @spcascades
    @spcascades 16 років тому +1

    Hmm. Not too bad. WE used the 084 for that, much more effective.
    Good to see some video of the bigger stuff coming down.

  • @starlady5555
    @starlady5555 14 років тому

    Keep up the great work!!! My husband is a logger as well :)
    I ran the dozer for him for several yrs!! LOVE IT

  • @MrAughroo
    @MrAughroo 10 років тому +13

    I can't help but laugh at charlie chap's comment on how tree's groan in agony, pain and fear when they fall. Absolutely ridiculous.

    • @PNWRailfan
      @PNWRailfan 9 років тому +2

      ***** So are vegetables...

    • @PNWRailfan
      @PNWRailfan 9 років тому +8

      ***** So when you eat them, do they 'groan' too?

    • @brockseelbach5975
      @brockseelbach5975 6 років тому +1

      Actually Robin, most of them do make a groaning sound as the hinge holding wood pulls apart when they fall. I've often joked about them groaning in pain so I can see where someone might say something like that.

  • @0409joe
    @0409joe 13 років тому +1

    @doktorandom
    Logging in southeast Alaska is different than Oregon, Washington, and California. Wolf, Deer and Bear populations have skyrocketed since logging started there. There are no endangered species to protect, and after 60 years of commercial harvest there has been no drop in population of any species of flora or fauna. Populations have only increased.
    1% of the Tongass's 17.2 million acres have been harvested for commercial use. That is a far cry from other American states.

  • @AceTreeManagement
    @AceTreeManagement 15 років тому +1

    looks like you got some big trees over there ! i like your work and keep it up !

  • @gordonreed248
    @gordonreed248 9 років тому

    Nice looking Humbolt on that second tree. It looks like you dropped it right where you wanted it too. Well done.

  • @speaks19822
    @speaks19822 12 років тому +7

    better to plant a tree than to cuss a logger

  • @timberbeast007
    @timberbeast007 14 років тому

    Nice Pumpkin Patch. Looks like your getting some good scale. Nice video. I sure do miss Southeast Alaska!

  • @blainstenberg2806
    @blainstenberg2806 9 років тому +16

    if you don't like logging. move out of your house and into a tent.the logging industry has planted move these than anyone else.

  • @MsBones1950
    @MsBones1950 11 років тому +6

    dropped a few of them myself years ago then along came osha . with all of their rules and regulations . always liked the big huskies. mac. and homelites but never cared for the big stills the 151 with a 5 foot bar was heavy and hard to drag around plus it uses a lot of fuel . I wound up with a 100 cc partner with a 4 foot bar loved that saw I tried the smaller stills i think they were the 45 and the 65 but not sure about the number that was years ago and my memory is not that good

    • @als1023
      @als1023 5 років тому +1

      Spent 10 years on the end of a huskie, with Canon bars, Stihls I like for bucking, not falling, and yes they gulped fuel. Huskies were so reliable and well made. Contract falling ,,, so many great memories, so grateful for the times ! We logged big timber on the west coast, lots of 13 - 15' trees, the huggers would pee their pants if they knew.

  • @lovethefifties1
    @lovethefifties1 11 років тому +1

    Don't know if you would refer me being smart. We began logging in the middle 1970's.
    I loved it, I loved working in the outdoors with nature. Yes, It was extreme physical work. And I am paying for it..there isn't an inch on my body that is pain-free. Full of arthritis. We didn't have high end materials to work with, as an example working with house logs. All loaded onto the truck by hand. Folks now are spoiled.

  • @denisthemenace.
    @denisthemenace. 5 років тому +2

    Beautiful, controlled cutting, a dying art here in Australia

  • @TarzanThomas
    @TarzanThomas 16 років тому

    Where was this taken? Who were you falling timber for, and how much were you getting a thousand? lol...Sorry for all the questions, its just that I lived and fell timber in southeast alaska for a few years.

  • @michaelphillips3941
    @michaelphillips3941 16 років тому

    I am a forester in England,UK..am confused as to why your stumps are so high..it is the best timber and also makes extraction a hell of a lot safer and easier? You seem to waste a good 4-5 feet of good timber on every tree you yanks fell? is there a reason for this?

  • @Thagreatcate
    @Thagreatcate 12 років тому

    TIMMMMMBER!!!!!Important part of our economy,keep up the good work.

  • @dennisthemenace57
    @dennisthemenace57 4 роки тому +1

    Love the sound of big wood hitting the ground

  • @blueshadow1996
    @blueshadow1996 15 років тому +1

    hey Jerry,,sound like your runnig out of gas..Great work....That is a big tree.Are those typical trees over in Alaska?

  • @frizzybob
    @frizzybob 13 років тому

    Heres a great quote.
    Destroy something man-made , you are called a vandal.
    Destory something mothernature made, you are called a developer.

  • @arnenelson4495
    @arnenelson4495 4 роки тому +2

    Stihl Power!

  • @DuncanLafayette
    @DuncanLafayette 15 років тому

    The chainsaw symbolizes the power and control of mankind over nature. I agree that listening to the birds singing and the crickets chirping is great....but let´s admit that the sound of a chainsaw thundering through a forest is simply poetry to our ears.....

  • @km2006dmax
    @km2006dmax 14 років тому

    Man that's one hell of a job to get one of those down. How do ya'll get the wood out once its down. Looks like a remote area.

  • @jeffmartinez8720
    @jeffmartinez8720 4 роки тому +1

    Love falling big timber!

  • @oldbearswitch
    @oldbearswitch 15 років тому

    Good to see I am not the only hoser who uses a hand sledge to drive hi swedges. Sometimes I use one of mysteel HD wedges.

  • @n421tt
    @n421tt 16 років тому

    And that is how Fallers play "Whack-a-Mole" lol

  • @rickevans8446
    @rickevans8446 7 років тому +1

    Sure seems to be a lot of bugs in Alaska with all that "Bug Dust" coming from those cuts.
    I'm sure 9 yrs. later the bugs aren't so bad. looks like pretty tough going in Alaska!!

  • @BC4Lyphe
    @BC4Lyphe 16 років тому

    How much fuel/bar oil do these guys carry when they go out? Do they usually bring more than one chain?

  • @blueshadow1996
    @blueshadow1996 15 років тому

    Good shot jerry...I thought i saw a tree that you dropped it on so it is easier to work..We call it benching..great vid bounty rooster.

  • @incontruth4116
    @incontruth4116 4 роки тому

    I have photos of my great grandpa near Big Sur California around 1940 and there isn’t a tree in sight because they used all the wood to power their stamp mill they used for gold mining and for cribbing in their mine. Now there’s trees as far as the eye can see.

  • @diggerdave51
    @diggerdave51 14 років тому

    Great Video. and a question for you, after felling those tree how do you get them out ?? Skyline or skid them ???

  • @PeterMatuszewski
    @PeterMatuszewski 12 років тому

    I wish y'all left some trees here in the Midwest. No nature left here except flooding, erosion, and tornadoes. Damn good job to y'all.

  • @Heazzie22
    @Heazzie22 14 років тому

    You should see what a mother deer and her fawn look like when they get tangled up in the cutter head of a wheat harvester. The owl who loses his house gets off easy compared to Bambi and his mom. Think about that next time you pour yourself a bowl of Wheaties or butter your toast and feel comfort that no animals were harmed in the making of your breakfast.

  • @darrenpalms
    @darrenpalms 15 років тому

    The wedges are used to keep pressure off the saw. The direction is determined by the lean of the tree, the undercut, and/or by the wind. The wedges dont always make the tree fall in the opposite direction...some trees can sit back hard and fall right back over your wedges...that can be dangerous

  • @flanksteak2
    @flanksteak2 12 років тому

    Trees are like people. They die as they get old. Did you notice how punky the first tree he cut was?

  • @neyo509
    @neyo509 14 років тому

    @thatguy2105 How long does it take for em to grow back? just asking im not sure

  • @mrmatt2525able
    @mrmatt2525able 11 років тому +3

    thats whats wrong with kids and adults these days. they dont now how to work hard

  • @tuttoz
    @tuttoz 14 років тому

    they use diff methods , sometimes they use cranes , or wires that run across the whole hill down ...and even rivers ... and there are still some outhere who cut the logs into pieces small enough to be hauled by a truck ... ect.

  • @MrKarlUnderwood
    @MrKarlUnderwood 12 років тому

    Thats the second biggest log I've ever seen!

  • @jontibloom
    @jontibloom 16 років тому +1

    After cocktail waitressing, logging is the most dangerous job in Canada

  • @horus2153
    @horus2153 6 років тому +1

    That first one the bro bent his bar for sure haha

  • @calfroper1210
    @calfroper1210 15 років тому

    that saw looks to be a Stihl ms660 which is 91.6 cc's and I think he is running a 36 in. bar

  • @Linkster2o
    @Linkster2o 16 років тому

    That is one hell of a cedar!
    We got Incense cedar down in oregon, they make pencils out of them.

  • @JasonPegis
    @JasonPegis 14 років тому

    I don't understand, if the trees are keeping you alive why do you destroy them? Are their resources really more important than living?

  • @JacksonAxe
    @JacksonAxe 11 років тому +1

    Probably just to make it easier on his back. Also, if he went lower he would be in the "bell" shape of the trunk which would require extra cutting. Hardly worth the extra work for an extra foot or so of length on a tree that size, though I have worked for people who would want the stumps lower because it is a huge waste of wood (money) over the long run. Especially regarding trees that size.

  • @4aSteadyStateEconomy
    @4aSteadyStateEconomy 11 років тому +8

    Generally speaking, if modern logging was truly "sustainable," there wouldn't be a need to keep logging more acreage to feed more demand. The net effect is less and less old-growth timber under the illusion of "balance" because it's not all gone (yet).
    The root problem is human overpopulation, which shouldn't be considered natural or desirable. Blind devotion to "the economy" keeps cannibalizing nature on many fronts.

    • @jacobwrona
      @jacobwrona 5 років тому +3

      4aSteadyStateEconomy Overpopulation is the problem with everything. If there were say... 5 billion less people I could drive a fleet of Hummers around on empty highways and not have to worry about Global warming. Electric cars are not the solution, convincing people (especially the stupid ones) not to reproduce is.

    • @mikeravenelle7073
      @mikeravenelle7073 4 роки тому +1

      @@jacobwrona It's refreshing that others out there see what the problem is. Those in high places better wake up soon or it will be too late. Mankind needs to stop over reproducing, stripping this Earth of it's natural resources. Fish stocks are disappearing in the ocean and yet we continue to over fish. Keep the faith Jacob.

    • @endicotttrucktractorrwolfe5568
      @endicotttrucktractorrwolfe5568 2 роки тому

      IF you only knew how inaccurate, SO Many people think, who have not been in both the Places that STATISTICS are created and the Places that people who are in offices and cubicles
      HAVE NO BUSINESS EVEN COMMENTING HERE.
      Just keep reading your Sierra blogs and brown bear extinction, sage grouse migration, and COMMERCE DEPT. Oil Production in Washington State, supposedly the 5th largest of the nation, and then
      Read about how Maury Schaefer had to APPOLIGIZE about Alar.
      America will not pay the real workers.
      Yes, it'sa lotta work in town to keep even a wheat harvest going.
      TIMBER, OIL, COAL, and now even STEEL, Are produced overseas, only because AMERICA has Been so Generous with our experience and exports of equipment and methods, besides the investments here at home:
      No one bothers to pay the Producers. People are plenty happy to have particle board and watch the Homeless on big screen
      .T.V. Retirements are all canceled. BOARD members and computers minimize inputs.
      JUST GO TO WALMART And Chinese Off Shore Trading Co. ; USE your Big Groups to get Govt. And Big Corp. Credit UNIONs, Tires, insurance and loans, so Commercial Banks cannot loan to small businesses.
      You ASKE FOR IT,
      YOU GOT IT AMERICA.
      No One Has Time for Church or teaching real Science, or how this nation was founded or has survived. As a VOCATIONAL Teacher, and a life long Logger, rancher, WELDOR/Operator, Industrial Electrical worker, Most of us see the NEA, As justa bout the worst member of Common Cause.
      THAT DOES NOT MEAN THAT TEACHERS DON'T CARE.... it Only means they are not Free enough to get out in real industries, even the stock markets, or banking. Parents are Required TO WORK TOO HARD, to have the time, BEFORE THEY ARE TRANSFERRED OR LAID OFF, and have to move.
      The Computers are telling the people what to do.

    • @endicotttrucktractorrwolfe5568
      @endicotttrucktractorrwolfe5568 2 роки тому

      @@kenblough5743 THE REAL TRUTH IS THAT SECOND GROWTH Is approaching too big for many mills to handle. The WORST MANAGEMENT is actually Generated by a PUBLIC, yes, WE the intelligent intellectuals, from the same Schools that have taught COMPUTER MODELS for our economy that cannot possibly even begin to fill the work orders for what the people now want.
      The USFS Used to be REASONABLE, but since 1980 has FAILED to Cut even 2% OF the REQUIRED BY LAW: One 90th of the 90 year ROTATION.
      Just go Bore if you must, without just looking up Doug fir, or whatever trees you want to use, in your community, besides a Madrona, or, actually Walnut trees, Maples we used to burn.
      Actually in a way you are correct. BOB'S RED TRUCK, whole wheat works out TO BE: 75 DOLLARS A BUSHEL.
      WE actually should REQUIRE THAT AT LEAST 8 percent of ALL WOOD PELLETS be WHEAT, or BARLEY.
      And since it's BECOME ILLEGAL To even DRILL, or Explore for OIL,
      Or more fisheries, WE NEED to be Going to STEAM, especially in big cities WE MUST RECYCLE, WE MUST RECYCLE, WE MUST SORT, WE MUST RECYCLE ..... especially the Finest Grapes, Wines, Spirits, Brews, and Gourmet MEATS, CHEESES, pies and Cakes ☺🤠🐮🐿🐈‍⬛🐴🤠🐮🐱. By the SWEAT UV YOUR BROW, shall Ye have Pizzas 🏰🏰🏰🏰🏰💒

    • @endicotttrucktractorrwolfe5568
      @endicotttrucktractorrwolfe5568 2 роки тому

      @@mikeravenelle7073 WE definitely ♥should have Aborted a lot of Eco Freaks, or sent them with THOR HYERDAHL, as DRYED MUNCHIES aboard the KON TIKI.
      We are the Loggers and the Bering Sea Fishermen,
      And OIL producers, Ship Builders, we produce enough Ozone to make the rest of the college PEOPLE WHO have Less College Science and Chemistry and Physics, Biometrics, calculus, and Bell curve psychology and educational Bohemian Rapsodies dancing girls, Could probably run this nation WITH MORE MORALITY, and Common Sense Bible teaching wether, they were Mormons, Baptist, puritan Hutterite, Catholic, Methodist Episcopal, or Saudi..... the Saudi students come here, and PRODUCE, ALGORE ITHMS, BILLY and Melinda Gate ,
      could not believe on the effectiveness of the seat belt laws, and SHUT DOWN YER TEXTS and Drive safely laws. Twenty feet behind at 60 mph puts a lot of SCAMMERS under the duals, or the trailers, on their way to their next big Real Estate deal, or TAIL GATES Allen, and well, iguess that's enuf, but many people in cubicles will believe it's raining because their screen says it is.... when the weather is nice. Compute the PPM of the acre feet of tide moving in and out 2 to 10 ft. More or less twice a day or the volume of dirt in the ocean. 😳☺🤠🐮🐱🏰💒Paul ALLEN Was a really good guy. He donated a lot of free fireworks shows with Shipments that didn't make it in time for many rural communities. We used to have more time it seems for family picnics and Church and even PTA Meetings.
      Now people argue about pets and CHICKENS in Town like Russia and others have. It's actually kinda interesting and fun.

  • @0409joe
    @0409joe 13 років тому

    Makes sense. I know they are originally European, I just arrogantly thought they sold their saws in a different nomencature for American sales. ( I forgot about Canada, who has the biggest influence in the market for North America).

  • @waltercelario
    @waltercelario 14 років тому

    is there any chance that the log will split and the wood get ruined if you don't fell it the right way?

  • @deepkeel65
    @deepkeel65 14 років тому

    @kalob35 But timber companies won't wait 600 years for the next crop. Nor will the soil still be there after so many harvests. Not to mention bidiversity. There's no free lunch. Not a tree hugger, I used to set chokers, pull both green and dry chain, and drive carrier. Just saying...

  • @a2zhandi
    @a2zhandi 12 років тому +1

    do you know how many college grads don't have a job? Also, lumberjacks make pretty good money. They're healthy, and can take care of themselves. Lets see a college educated person do that.

  • @Kemonokami
    @Kemonokami 12 років тому +1

    You still need an ass-load of trees to keep carbon levels down and provide habitats for wildlife. They are nature's air filters, after all.

  • @NebraskaCowman
    @NebraskaCowman 14 років тому

    he didn't have much hinge left on that 2nd one. But he knew when to quit sawing and use the wedges.

  • @KASPLARFO
    @KASPLARFO 13 років тому +1

    She goes at 3:35 & 8:20.
    You're welcome.

  • @cappyeh71
    @cappyeh71 14 років тому

    well done..... thx for the vids

  • @maddyquinn
    @maddyquinn 14 років тому

    Awesome! Great job!!

  • @MisekD2
    @MisekD2 14 років тому

    Did the first tree crash your chainsaw?

  • @SoundwaveX7
    @SoundwaveX7 14 років тому

    How long is the bar on your saw?

  • @211for11
    @211for11 14 років тому

    2nd tree looks like a barber chair surprise

  • @darrenpalms
    @darrenpalms 15 років тому

    How did you guess that?!?! Do you run a ms660?!?!

  • @starlady5555
    @starlady5555 14 років тому

    GREAT WORK GUYS!!! KEEP IT UP!!

  • @doright9845
    @doright9845 6 років тому

    What you are supposed to do, is when you fell a tree, you fell it so that it tears the limbs out of all of the standing timber around the fall! That way, you don't have to ever come back and cut the other trees! Lumber Jack's making videos!

  • @Mitch95100
    @Mitch95100 13 років тому

    Awsome job man!

  • @Nate1471
    @Nate1471 14 років тому

    @Wiccanking1 good comment i wish other people would understand that if there weren't loggers that other jobs would be shut down and people wouldn't have houses funriture and toys to play with

  • @1littlemike
    @1littlemike 14 років тому

    nice job didnt even bust it and very little splinters

  • @62schmidt
    @62schmidt 15 років тому

    the direction is mostly determined by the faller, either with wedges or jacks,I have seen them take a 6 ft'er from 15degrees left and fall it right good fallers, if the trees are not parrell to each other then they get broken more and are harder to choke and skip.

  • @floppyfishing
    @floppyfishing 11 років тому

    i run a debarker in wa state wish my mill could get some lumber like this all the good logs seem to get bought and shipped over seas and we end up with a 20-25 inch Scribner cutting pulp logs into studs

  • @rgwinter007
    @rgwinter007 12 років тому

    whoa dude...you fell trees before? you knocked that thing into standing timber..

  • @dglwynn
    @dglwynn 12 років тому

    i use concrete, and this new amazing product called steel.. as for wiping my arse yup recycled paper is kewl.. i dont deny old time loggers a right to show their art but as we have learnt by strip logging old growth forest and seeing and learning the effects.. erosion, extinction, blackberries.. BTW nice saw and great saw work.. just wish i had a had to wipe my arse with.. would save so much on a termite ridden timber framed house that blew away in a tornado

  • @Heazzie22
    @Heazzie22 14 років тому

    I love people who say these guys are destroying nature. Unless you are typing your comment on a computer plugged into a solar panel and sleeping under the stars in the great outdoors and NOT in a house made of WOOD, you need these guys in the forests harvesting timber. Loggers are no different than farmers in the mid-west that harvest a field of corn. It gets harvested replanted and harvested again generation after generation. I don't see anyone protesting a farmer harvesting his crops.

  • @susanfay6395
    @susanfay6395 11 років тому

    this guy can cut timber. god job.

  • @ragnarjonsson1122
    @ragnarjonsson1122 8 років тому

    Jerry sure knows how to drop'em

  • @defenderer
    @defenderer 14 років тому

    the thing is when a tree is fully grown like this it has had a full life so i dont know what everyone has such an issue over it. it should be the baby trees that are protected as they have hundreds of years of growth left. there are too many out there who comment on things they know nothing about . oh i am not a logger

  • @timbco475
    @timbco475 15 років тому

    very nice .

  • @mahoniLampungwood
    @mahoniLampungwood 4 місяці тому

    Wowww...👍👍👍

  • @HazeGreyAndUnderway
    @HazeGreyAndUnderway 12 років тому

    What kind of saw is that?

  • @joshuarugg
    @joshuarugg 14 років тому

    nice! good fall my friend!!!

  • @Heazzie22
    @Heazzie22 14 років тому

    @straightpipesrule You couldn't be further off I live no place near CA. If you read both of my posts you would have noticed that I was talking about harvesting crops in the mid-west and comparing those renewable resources to logging. What I said was deer will sit still in the field when I approach on a WHEAT harvester (i.e. Combine) often get tangled up in it. Again was making a comparison since another poster was complaining how cutting down trees destroys an owls house. I am all for logging.

  • @thatguy2105
    @thatguy2105 14 років тому

    @transdrole The amount of oxygen emitted by older trees, is not near as much as younger healthier trees. By cutting down older trees, it opens the floor to regeneration (Lots more younger trees) to come up. If you never worked in the woods, you don't know anything about trees.

  • @Heazzie22
    @Heazzie22 14 років тому

    @PsychoKai1 You are correct that a bird or other tree living creature may lose its house when a tree gets cut down, but have you ever harvested on a farm before? I have and you would be surprised of the number of deer, turkey, pheasants and other animals that get run over and killed when we clear cut corn, wheat and soy bean and hay fields. Every year it never fails that many of these animals bed down in the fields and out of fear stay perfectly still despite the approaching harvester.

  • @Bjorgl
    @Bjorgl 14 років тому

    do you have cupboards, furniture, doors, drywall?

  • @cedarlanewoodworks
    @cedarlanewoodworks 11 років тому +1

    Quite a risk leaving the saw in the cut (3:45). Good way to be -$1000.

    • @MartyInTheWoods
      @MartyInTheWoods 6 років тому +1

      actually the saw was stuck for some reason.
      And it was quite a risk getting it out! Good way to be - 1 life (and most people I know, only got the 1 - which means "GAME OVER" ;-)

  • @bushcraft96
    @bushcraft96 13 років тому

    @Soundgarden8497 by the looks of things its a pine forest not disiduel! therefore not a wild forest!

  • @kalob35
    @kalob35 14 років тому

    most people..........fo every tree a logger cuts down 3-5 trees are replanted by the stump of the cut down tree

  • @larrywilliamsii7533
    @larrywilliamsii7533 12 років тому +1

    sure is a shame to see the big ones go but id rather see them used instead of laying on the ground rotting.

  • @surferqci
    @surferqci 12 років тому

    Timber @ 8:25 With an steel wedge? Never seen one in action before.

  • @pekerja27
    @pekerja27 Рік тому

    Sepertinya kayu yang berumur sudah tua terlihat dari kulit dan besar nya lingakaran kayu😮

  • @1redneck15
    @1redneck15 12 років тому

    its just a tree guys, they make em every day

  • @frizzybob
    @frizzybob 14 років тому +1

    arborporn, i always just fast forward to the money shot.

  • @fstwrtr
    @fstwrtr 15 років тому

    what size is that saw?

  • @Heazzie22
    @Heazzie22 14 років тому

    @frizzybob No actually laptops are not made of wood, but i bet the electricity that they consume was produced by some power plant that contains wood somewhere within its walls or was carried on power lines held in the air by wooden poles that you may or may not have noticed along side of the street. And without that electricity you would not be able to sit in your house/apt (also most likely made of wood) and watch videos on youtube to complain about.

  • @haydenyoung7166
    @haydenyoung7166 5 років тому

    is that jerry martin

  • @caseman2294
    @caseman2294 13 років тому

    @ntahapapa01 no.......that is a Stihl.

  • @PERPARSON
    @PERPARSON 16 років тому +1

    STIHL POWER!!!

  • @uniquelandscapes697
    @uniquelandscapes697 12 років тому

    Chainsaw noise is how you understand what you doing!!!