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Dozer op. the only one who DID NOT do anything wrong. He moved dozer to other side of road so truck could swing wide after crossing the bridge. Truck’s tandem was sinking in mud before it got to bridge. Ground man didn’t stop drive. Trailer with long tongue, “string lined back of truck off of bridge. Boss should’ve got truck over bridge by itself, then let dozer pull trailer across. Happens all the time, not enough time to do a job the right way, but plenty of time to pick up the mess.
The problem is insurance is so high that training a faller isn’t feasible. You are expected to know what to do….A cutter needs to produce for the company to stay afloat. This faller doesn’t need to be fired, he needs better training.
It appears that you have been filming onboard footage of RHD trucks in New Zealand for 15+ years. This modern footage is very interesting, and it looks like a very fun ride. I would love to see even more onboard videos of them this year, so nice job, and keep up the excellent work!
Good modern logging action down there in New Zealand, and Happy Waitangi Day! I hope you and your family are having an excellent time. Greetings from the United States!
Still filming and uploading New Zealand logging videos? Amazing! I hope you and your family had a Merry Christmas and a nice New Year's weekend! Do you have any footage to upload this year yet? I'm just curious.
1:06 - Listen to that sound of a truck engine starting up! Was that a Caterpillar engine or something? New Zealand has a fantastic mix of big rigs that look American, Canadian, European, and Japanese.
In Russia it is called "barbaric logging". It is forbidden to saw on the slopes of the ravines so that there is no soil erosion. Whoever does this goes to jail.
*I have lived in Wa., Or., and Idaho as a logger/and tree trucker for 30+ years. *I read the negative comments, and thought I would throw my two cents in. *This is a difficult and dangerous strip to log. *A video can be Very deceiving. *We do not know exactly where the land ownership, begins or ends, i.e. the cut line. Or what the contract states concerning trees felled onto private ground. *The faller is in a dangerous situation, [as usual] but here, he is even more so. *Steep ground, *Plus being "tied" to a cat, and another human/the cat skinner. Trust me,.. *it's On your mind. *Falling trees in steep terrain up hill where stumps are present. Will often cause the trees to become bound up between the stumps, when they are turned butt first as the are yarded. *We do not know if these trees will be saw logs for lumber, or chipped for pulp. (I've hauled many loads of nice "saw logs" to paper mills when the demand $ was high) * The video shows only 4 trees being felled, and one of them is 'schoolmarmed' near the top. *We do not know what debris/tops/limbs were left behind, nor how 'raked clean the finished strip was. *The rooted stumps will help with the erosion which will occur. But, again we do not know if, or what type of erosion control measures were put in place at the completion. *Trees are normally planted ASAP after logging, at a rate of 3 for every 1 harvested. * Private timber companies, private land owners, along with the National Forest Land and Timber Managers, do all they can to "Get It Right". Long gone are the days of "Rape And Pillage". Other than my rant; I must say; It was cool seeing an arch being used.
well thankyou very much for the good comment there are a lot of people out there who wipe their arse with plastic and all of those logs on that job went as export and pulp cheers