I've been on the outside of the Bonfire community for the past 5 years, but have had a lingering curiosity about the increasing height of the stumps at cut. At First Cut in '99, I recall the wedge on a tree being set 12 to 15 inches off the ground; however the past few years of pictures have shown stumps almost 3ft. tall. I have participated in logging operations that sought to level off the stumps at as near to the ground as possible (to harvest as much viable wood as possible) so leaving valuable timber in the ground is strange to me.
I can try to rationalize this practice, but need some help verifying current reasoning. Here's what I have come up with:
1. Safety. Cutting high reduces the incidence of foot injuries from glancing axe swings. It also levels out the wedge for a more "predictable" tree felling.
2. Landowner Request. If the landowner doesn't care how the site looks after cut is complete, safety reigns supreme (#1) and stumps will remain high.
3. Root Ball Removal. High stumps give stump removal equipment more to grab on to, so leaving them makes it easier for the browns/clean-up crew.
4. Fundraising. Money used to be made from firewood harvested from the tops, butts, and stump left-overs after burn.
5. Kickback issues. The higher the wedge, the less the grounded foliage is likely to push the base of the log into the individual killing the tree.
6. Swing efficiency. A low front wedge is tough to keep level and requires more accuracy and control to do correctly.
7. Tradition.
8. Expendable timber. The trees are so tall and Bonfire height is capped, so logs over XX ft. tall aren't needed.
I'm playing Bonfire's Advocate, hoping that a real answer comes forth. I can make a case against all of my stated rationale, but I'd like for someone to come forward with "the" reason.
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If you can read this, thank a teacher.
If you can read this in English, thank a Soldier.
I can try to rationalize this practice, but need some help verifying current reasoning. Here's what I have come up with:
1. Safety. Cutting high reduces the incidence of foot injuries from glancing axe swings. It also levels out the wedge for a more "predictable" tree felling.
2. Landowner Request. If the landowner doesn't care how the site looks after cut is complete, safety reigns supreme (#1) and stumps will remain high.
3. Root Ball Removal. High stumps give stump removal equipment more to grab on to, so leaving them makes it easier for the browns/clean-up crew.
4. Fundraising. Money used to be made from firewood harvested from the tops, butts, and stump left-overs after burn.
5. Kickback issues. The higher the wedge, the less the grounded foliage is likely to push the base of the log into the individual killing the tree.
6. Swing efficiency. A low front wedge is tough to keep level and requires more accuracy and control to do correctly.
7. Tradition.
8. Expendable timber. The trees are so tall and Bonfire height is capped, so logs over XX ft. tall aren't needed.
I'm playing Bonfire's Advocate, hoping that a real answer comes forth. I can make a case against all of my stated rationale, but I'd like for someone to come forward with "the" reason.
-------------------------------------------------------
If you can read this, thank a teacher.
If you can read this in English, thank a Soldier.