My kids and I drove up to my dad's farm in northeast Ohio for Thanksgiving, and had a fine time. In what seems to be becoming a Thanksgiving tradition for us, we cut down a dead tree that had become a nuisance along one of the farm lanes, and then had a great bonfire.
Big old poplar I think, maybe three feet in diameter and 60 feet high. To increase the chances that the tree would fall downhill as we wanted, and not onto on the nearby fenceline or back uphill across the lane itself, we tied a very long rope around it up high, notched the trunk on the side we wanted to fall towards, and then my dad used his Allis D-19 to gradually tension the rope as my brother cut the trunk on the uphill side and my son drove in some wedges. I watched from several feet away so I could gauge which way the tree was leaning and warn my brother and son off if things started to go bad, and used some pre-arranged arm signals to tell my dad when to pull more on the rope. All went well, and the tree came down with a mighty crash, much to the delight of assorted nephews and nieces watching from a safe distance.
Dad used the D-19 to drag over some big limbs that had fallen off other nearby trees over the past several months, and we had a bonfire that's probably still got a lot of heat left in it now, three days later. Tending that fire over the next day or two was a lot of fun, and we wished we had some more vacation days to stay up there.
Motivated by all the fun, once home I got the M out and pulled down the broken-off upper trunk of a tree that had fallen but gotten hung up in the woods behind my house. It had been out there since the big post-Ike windstorm a couple months ago but I just hadn't gotten around to it. The crash coming down wasn't near the big one up at the farm but it felt good to do some work with the M, and once again I'm wishing there was more.
Couple of pictures attached...
Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio
http://www.vinsonfarm.net