IDIOTS WITH CHAINSAWS!!! My First Tree Job as a Business Owner

2022 ж. 28 Мам.
504 736 Рет қаралды

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  • I've felt like that before, I remember one time saying, "I'm not cut out for this." But most of the time. . . I'm Made for This." So are you.

    @AugustHunicke@AugustHunicke2 жыл бұрын
    • Listen to August. You pulled it off. You kept going for it. You're the guy doing it. Keep after it.

      @messybench@messybench2 жыл бұрын
    • The tree is down, it went the direction you wanted it to go. Perfect job I say. Did you learn anything? Even better.

      @jamesspinks716@jamesspinks7162 жыл бұрын
    • Maybe buy a jack ? And stay behind a little more. It’s only gas. No walk involved.

      @rhyssutherland8937@rhyssutherland89372 жыл бұрын
    • Kudos to you for posting this video. So many would be tempted to only post the glory jobs, but you have shared a “bad” day. That makes you all the better

      @bradhocking1858@bradhocking18582 жыл бұрын
    • "Jack" ...as in hydraulic is the one coworker you cant work without... :)

      @donb8447@donb84472 жыл бұрын
  • This is the crowning moment when transitioning from big company tree work to solo. One minute you have 3-10 guys on a job with dozens of eyes and now it's all you and your instincts. Thanks for sharing, this is the real world.

    @VegasEdo@VegasEdo2 жыл бұрын
    • 100%.

      @levigranger5383@levigranger53832 жыл бұрын
    • that sums it up perfectly

      @chelct5057@chelct50572 жыл бұрын
    • Well put!

      @ss229er7@ss229er72 жыл бұрын
    • Well said! Its also the same when you are going from an experienced team to being the only one on the crew with experience, having to teach them on the job. Everything looks a lot scarier when you have to be 100% sure on your own, without being able to get a second opinion from someone you trust who is seeing it from a different angle.

      @nate2838@nate2838 Жыл бұрын
    • @@nate2838 So true man, exactly what iam going through right now

      @arminarbor1484@arminarbor1484 Жыл бұрын
  • I have been a timber faller for 34 yrs and am still cutting. Don’t beat yourself up buddy you got it down. You are safe you didn’t hurt any one. You learned a lot on this tree. I’m going to give you a couple of pointers for next time… on this kind of tree in the future. Don’t be afraid to start your back cut first… drive your wedges up tight saw a little more wedge up tight then saw your face cut. This gives you pressure to lift first and also you don’t loose ground sawing the face in. Another thing is the 1/3 of the tree for your face cut isn’t a hard fast rule it’s a baseline most times it works. But when you have to lift the tree more to bring it out of a back lean that shallow face will hurt you more than help you. Your hinge is the pivot point the more weight that is behind the pivot point the harder the tree lifts. Cut your face a bit further into the tree will really help on lifting as you then put more tree weight in front of the pivot point. Also don’t be so concerned about your back cut being level with your face cut. Go 2 inch’s higher with the back cut that helps change the weight dynamics in your favor. But don’t go lower than your face cut. Higher in the back in effect let’s the tree fall into the face were as a low back cut you are lifting the tree up into the face cut. I sincerely hope this helps. Little hard to explain with out being able to show you lol. Keep up the good hard work keep being your worst critic keep being humble and never stop learning. You got this buddy.

    @mattsflytying2816@mattsflytying2816 Жыл бұрын
    • best advice ever..."don’t be so concerned about your back cut being level with your face cut. Go 2 inch’s higher with the back cut..". ie allow for a mistake. If you can make extra runway - why not do it?

      @silverleapers@silverleapers Жыл бұрын
    • I appreciate you sharing you knowledge and experience with us

      @wallaceshell1794@wallaceshell1794 Жыл бұрын
    • @@wallaceshell1794 you are most welcome 🙏 thank you

      @mattsflytying2816@mattsflytying2816 Жыл бұрын
    • Yep…totally agree with you that the face cut was woefully small! I have noticed over the years that many fallers that learned “out west” (I’m a north-east guy) and use Humbolt undercuts make then really shallow-this has the dual drawbacks of both not shifting the center of gravity and causing the hinge to break early due to the face closing too quickly. Don’t be afraid to make a wide-open face everybody! All that being said, I think every one of us that cuts for a living have had our fair share of “sky hung” trees!

      @johns3106@johns3106 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for sharing.

      @cobyclaypool1520@cobyclaypool1520 Жыл бұрын
  • As a well respected arborist and youtuber you just gained 10X more respect for sharing this. Its a learning/teaching moment, it promotes honesty and transparence and will ultimately help others understand the trials and tribulation of this kind of work and that "jobs may appear easier then they are" on youtube lol. Well done and thank you.

    @groundzero.@groundzero. Жыл бұрын
    • How you managed to get that leaning tree to go where you wanted that is phenomenal. That was one huge tree! Every tree is different. May have taken longer than you thought. An amazing job! 👍👍

      @billrobbins5874@billrobbins58746 ай бұрын
  • This video isn’t a lesson on tree felling, its a beautiful lesson on learning and humility. Great job brother. Everyone is safe.

    @nativibesstudio8871@nativibesstudio88712 жыл бұрын
  • The fact that you were humble enough to upload this tells us what kind of person you are. You made yourself extremely vulnerable to all of us at the end and that took a lot of courage. It was still an entertaining video to watch. I also appreciate that you give credit to our Creator regularly in your videos. You’ll do great things on this new venture

    @RTRALLDAY@RTRALLDAY Жыл бұрын
  • You're such a humble guy. No need to be embarrassed. The tree fell where you wanted and you went home safe to your family. That's a victory in anyone's book.

    @GreenRiverRider@GreenRiverRider Жыл бұрын
  • Massive kudos for sharing this, Jacob. We are all always learning! "If you're not failing, you're not pushing yourself." Way to learn from this and share it so we can too 👏🏽👏🏽

    @joshjspice@joshjspice Жыл бұрын
  • Don't be so hard on yourself Jake, you are a great tree climber, and trimmer, and faller, never doubt yourself, and don't give up your self confidence, you worked too hard for it.

    @jannetteince113@jannetteince1132 жыл бұрын
  • I’ve been there! Heavy wood back leaners make solo work really stressful. Prayers never hurt in those situations, and Im glad you found that extra wedge. I still learn a lesson at every job, even if everything goes according to plan. Thanks for sharing, Jake! These videos and your thoughts always help me think of better ways to do the work!

    @CK-et5do@CK-et5do2 жыл бұрын
    • I'm guessing his truck is now full of spare wedges!

      @charleswhite758@charleswhite758 Жыл бұрын
    • It's always good to have more equipment than you need. That way ,you will never be short. Jake, you shouldn't feel embarrassed , you took your time and things turned out, ok. I think we all figure that we don't have to go higher , on the tie off. More is always better. But things turned out for the best. Kudos to you for a job well done, and safe, with no damage. Always a desired outcome.

      @thomasgersitz338@thomasgersitz3382 ай бұрын
  • You have my respect for showing how it happened. You have reminded the rest of us that it doesn’t always go according to plan and we just have to work through the complications and learn from them. You got it down successfully. Good video. A little “humble pie” once in a while makes us better in the long run.

    @michaelleduc219@michaelleduc219 Жыл бұрын
  • I learned more about the arborist mindset in the last 10 minutes of this video than any other tree felling video I've watched on KZhead. This is real life and this is how it feels every time I cut a tree. Nobody is ever 100% confident things will go the way they want them to. Every tree is different and has a mind of its own. Thanks for sharing.

    @MrSterster@MrSterster8 ай бұрын
  • The only hard part of watching this video was you being so hard on yourself. The tree came down exactly where you wanted it, you're great at what you do Jake and the fact that you're willing to still put videos out where things didn't go exactly to plan plays testament to your character. There are so many people out there waiting for us to fail that the one person that needs to believe in you more than anyone else, is you. That voice in our heads is always there, make sure it's saying positive things otherwise it can consume you. Stay strong my brother, on to the next one 👊👍🤟

    @Cooksonite@Cooksonite Жыл бұрын
    • Honestly, he is hard but true, this could have been a massive fuckup. I like your supportive mindset, but one has to never loose touch with reality and sincerely divide haters and critics. I am super glad that this ended well, I myself have had a very similar experience with just a 20m tree and we got it down just after hitching it to a car, climbing up the already cut tree and taking off few branches. Longest hour of my life.

      @alcupone6462@alcupone6462 Жыл бұрын
  • First day as an owner-operator solo arborist and you were able to apply every tool you own: knowledge, hardware, perseverance, and humility. The tree landed exactly where you wanted, you're safe, the homeowner is happy, and you insurance company didn't need to be involved. I'd call this a major win. It was from watching your videos I came to conclude wedges are cheap, but utterly indispensable. And you can never have enough :D

    @peterbachman5965@peterbachman5965 Жыл бұрын
  • Anyone who has cut down a big tree but encountered geometry and resistance that defied all logic and observation feels for you. It's that hollow chest, high heartrate and abject fear that you can't understand or control. You did good son. The battle ended the war with no casualties on your side. Carry on.

    @stevest1300@stevest13002 ай бұрын
  • This may be your BEST video ever for so many reasons. The emotion, the anxiety, struggle, the doubt, the VICTORY! Loved it brother and thanks for sharing. I think people learn more from these types of videos.

    @VBGRIM@VBGRIM Жыл бұрын
  • Nice work. Honesty & humility always wins. No mistakes just lessons learned.

    @joshualancaster5943@joshualancaster59432 жыл бұрын
    • Correct! Don't give up.

      @jamesmooney5348@jamesmooney53482 жыл бұрын
    • Reality is a great teacher.

      @messybench@messybench2 жыл бұрын
    • What could he have learned? Could he cut more of the hinge wood off? or make a bigger face cut

      @MikfinityPog@MikfinityPog Жыл бұрын
  • Something you said spoke to me, "I was going to charge the customer too much." I am a contract pilot for a living and my job got easier when I realized short changing myself by not doing the job in the safest manner wasn't in MY best interest financially as well as mentally. At the end of the day I'm the guy tasked with keeping everyone and their aircraft in one piece. There are days when I could fly through bad weather and save the owners thousands of dollars in fuel and an unplanned overnight stay by flying through something that I'm 99% sure we can get through it safe but if my gut tells me to go around the weather then so be it...we are going around. Be safe, charge commensurate with your skillset. Professional work isn't cheap and cheap work isn't professional. Remember the proverbial corner you cut could sink your business. I wish you the best and love your humbleness as much as your content. Godspeed with the new endeavor and I hope to watch you succeed for years to come.

    @SturgellatOSU@SturgellatOSU2 жыл бұрын
    • very well chosen words of advice. Thanks for commenting

      @wayned2315@wayned2315 Жыл бұрын
  • Don’t be embarrassed, you got it down virtually alone, and in the end exactly where you needed it. We don’t have to be perfect. Have fun doing what you do. Even if we get frustrated at times, I’d rather be outdoors than cooped up in a office or kitchen.

    @Takingcareofbusiness669@Takingcareofbusiness669 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video of the job. The reason for the lean was the extra growth on the back side. When you climb to set your line, remove the limbs on the heavy side and the front limbs will counter the lean.

    @BStein434@BStein434 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for this wise and observant tip.

      @stephenmills5649@stephenmills5649Ай бұрын
  • 12 years experience and still winging it sounds like pretty much every tree man ever, if it works it works

    @jstrevens3959@jstrevens39592 жыл бұрын
    • “I think this is gonna work” before every cut

      @fanosoX@fanosoX Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for posting this video Jake. I admire your honesty, it took some serious guts to post this. I’ve had days like this too, so I can feel you, I appreciate you.

    @benjobello@benjobello2 жыл бұрын
  • Man, every tree person has their own wisdom, experience, capabilities. We should all be humble and learn from each other. You got it done man👌 I’ll offer you what I see on this. What I do in these situations is set up a good solid 3:1 which will hold the weight, and then I’ll add a fiddle block 5:1 system to do the real pulling, and again the 3:1 will hold and the 5:1 can be reset as many times as needed. Thanks for sharing man 🔥

    @WMC.@WMC. Жыл бұрын
  • You’re so humble and honest! Great job, safe felling, tree went where you wanted it, house is intact and everyone is safe. Job well done! You’re an inspiration!

    @magnuslindvall@magnuslindvall Жыл бұрын
  • It's funny how we beat ourselves up so bad when we make mistakes. I've been in the tree business for over 20 years and atleast once a year I have a moment just like you did. It took alot to put the video out and for that you gained a tremendous amount respect. We are constantly learning and everything isn't always perfect. Keep on keeping on

    @jayzerblazer@jayzerblazer2 жыл бұрын
    • When you're the owner of a project - suddenly things you could have shrugged off as a worker become big deals. That feeling of "this is all on me now" is really something. Takes some time and fixing some fuck ups to really come into your own. Or at least that's how it goes for me. Not a tree guy. I'm a farmer.. and it's gotta similar feel. The fact he can own it and post the video.. I'm sure this guy is gonna go far.

      @gs4811@gs4811 Жыл бұрын
    • As a concrete guy and business owner I agree. It all changes to a different level.

      @hummer4129@hummer4129 Жыл бұрын
  • The tree went where you wanted it to go, and it seems you left the experience with more knowledge and resources than when you began. Congratulations! I imagine there is a great future for you as an independent arborist.

    @Trevor-ps2oe@Trevor-ps2oe Жыл бұрын
    • More by luck.

      @charleswhite758@charleswhite758 Жыл бұрын
  • I have watched a lot of tree felling videos and this one was the best I have ever seen because of the raw emotion and the real feeling I got by your experience. Bravo. I really enjoyed this one to the max.

    @salmonforever6088@salmonforever6088 Жыл бұрын
  • The emotion and vulnerability you showed in this video is incredible! Never forget how you felt in that moment! Either we stay humble or get humiliated...I think you were very much the former. You are an inspirational young man...keep doing what you love!

    @jeremyadams8343@jeremyadams8343 Жыл бұрын
  • Safe to say you will always remember your first “0n you own” job. You did great, yea maybe since you were up the tree anyway cutting a few big back side limbs would’ve been good, but hey, alls well that ends well. You are the real deal, honest, and humble is worth a lot. Thanks Jake, keep the videos coming! Thanks

    @joncozzi1701@joncozzi17012 жыл бұрын
  • As a rank amateur who has been helping his neighbor with some of his dead oaks, it is reassuring to see a pro have difficulty now and then. Glad to see that you got insurance and look forward to following you on your journey.

    @rerolley@rerolley2 жыл бұрын
  • I really love the community for this channel so much support and I'm glad you uploaded this.

    @pyro4869@pyro48692 ай бұрын
  • Bro, I just started watching your videos. I am starting my tree work journey right now. Your love and passion shine through. From my perspective you had a great day! The tree hit the ground safely, and you learned a lot! I learned a lot watching you! Thank you for posting, and please continue being an inspiration.

    @dylanthompson1831@dylanthompson1831 Жыл бұрын
  • Evey thing has a learning curve, being on you own is not the same as working with a team. Great job on the tree, be safe and take care..

    @55ATA3@55ATA32 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for still uploading this Jake . It’s great to see when things go wrong too as it’s not shown online enough. Let’s everyone learn from each other’s mistakes making the tree world safer for all . Your vids are helpful aswell as entertaining keep at it dude 🤟

    @bengardiner2420@bengardiner24202 жыл бұрын
  • Your humble mindset is amazing. Never stop learning. Your first job as a business owner added a lot of stess and worry. Keep at it. There is a reason you get so many compliments.

    @otov100@otov100 Жыл бұрын
  • The fact that you spent time obsessing about getting it right is proof you're on the right track. We are all just practicing to make ourselves better at this because, like you, we care about doing it right. Good luck and God bless.

    @stevedempsey8660@stevedempsey8660 Жыл бұрын
  • You never loose, either you win or you learn...I would say you've had both today. Thanks for sharing your journey

    @py7433@py74332 жыл бұрын
  • When your not expecting to learn lessons.. life never fails to teach you any way. Good job man may have taken you longer then you would of liked but the tree is down safe and your safe

    @bigshukas@bigshukas2 жыл бұрын
  • This is the most inspirational tree video yet. It just goes to show when everything goes as planned trees will teach you something new. I've got a lot of respect for you after this video! I've been doing tree work for about as long as you and I never film myself because of moments like this where you get humbled. Your the man! I'd love to get to climb with some of y'all one day!

    @dabrokest530@dabrokest530 Жыл бұрын
  • hey Jacob, I worked for a company for three years and knew every aspect of what I was doing. I went out on my own and the first job by myself under my own company name I looked like it was my first day lol. keep your head up it will only get better

    @charliefletcher7772@charliefletcher7772 Жыл бұрын
  • Respect for sharing this, we all struggle some times. Turned out good in the end. Lessons learned, experience gained, happy customer. Great videos Jacob

    @Battlezax@Battlezax2 жыл бұрын
  • In summary, nothing and noone was hurt and the tree's on the ground. Life's constantly a learning process. You did a very great job. Love your videos, keep the motivation high and most importantly: be kind

    @raphaelschoen3281@raphaelschoen32812 жыл бұрын
    • No blood and thud. God's grace.

      @wild1bill1950@wild1bill1950 Жыл бұрын
  • I just wanted to say thanks, your humbleness shows your character you may have saved someone’s life by being honest. I’m 58 years old I have trees on my property I’ve paid arborist to cut the big monsters down and I’ve fell a few myself but understanding the mechanics of it all and those teaching moments you will help people make safe decisions. Blessings my friend.

    @tomgreenwood4769@tomgreenwood47694 ай бұрын
  • Gotta say, have watched a lot of content and this job was great watch and educational for us both, im happy for you being your own business man, learning your own lessons and learning from your own mistakes. I've done rigging for many years and i was with you the whole way, that tree must of been leaning back very hard. credit to you bro, be there to support you in your journey, Keep it up . Much love from Qld Australia.

    @jackhamilton8796@jackhamilton8796 Жыл бұрын
  • Great job man, Eirik working for someone is one thing, getting out on your own adds a whole new level of stress and anxiety. You didn't quit which shows value. Speaking of value never be afraid to charge for your skills. You are performing a service that is very niche. You are worth every penny!

    @tatehogan5685@tatehogan56852 жыл бұрын
  • Man I really felt ya at 18:48 I have steel wedges and after a few minutes of pounding them in I am whipped! I’m 57 and own 20 acres in SE Ohio and it a healthy mix of hardwood and pine. Always great to watch you as you gave me the courage to buy climbing equipment and being my own personal arborist! Many thanks sir!!

    @angeljjustice1345@angeljjustice1345 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey Jake and I'm a retired tree man I did it for 26 years I work with my father for many of those years he taught me a lot of different things and I learned a lot from a lot of tree men just like yourself.. I went and worked for different companies checking out different rigging techniques and everything to learn more about doing tree work.... But nowadays from what I'm seeing the tree industry has really evolved a lot more with new technology and everything. We all have our bad days we all have our days when we're scared that something could go wrong or go smooth as glass.... But you don't know how the tree is going to actually go until you actually go through the trials of everything that you're doing .... But I have to say I'm impressed with a lot of the shows that I have seen of you and the things that I've seen you you do are very impressive. Some of the stuff that you've done with crane some of the stuff you've done with the rigging techniques... But not a lot of guys out there that are in the field have the courage like you do ... Some of them even hire other to do their work and there's nothing wrong with that.... It's just that some people have a little bit more skill some people don't unless they actually keep on moving forward with the business. Congratulations on getting your insurance it is a very stressful, Dangerous and expensive way of making a living and it can also be very rewarding.... So never get yourself down and always keep your head high... Because we all have our bad days but you did a great job you got the tree on the ground and everything was safe and you made the customer satisfied because the job is done and his property is now a lot safer because of what you perform ....Well done keep up the good work I look forward to seeing a lot more videos of anything that you put on here ..Because it makes me feel like I'm back in a tree and I really miss climbing and I really miss doing the job that I loved doing ...I had to retire because of medical reasons otherwise I'd still be doing it. But if you ever South West Florida I would definitely want to be able to meet you and shake your hand .. So take care of yourself Jake keep me climbing through you.

    @OBGjoeennis69@OBGjoeennis69 Жыл бұрын
    • What He Said 🌳

      @monicaayer7470@monicaayer7470 Жыл бұрын
  • It is incredibly liberating, encouraging and enabling to see and hear you express what is in your head. The genuineness and self-deprecation is endearing. Your curiosity about treework in different settings is going to increase your wisdom. Your complete honesty and humility transcends the profession. In my view it will benefit anybody to watch this. G'man Jacob!!

    @coast_valley@coast_valley Жыл бұрын
  • You dropped the tree accurately, safely, and while filming and narrating. You literally did the work of 5 men by yourself (not including your pulley system). Brother, the first day out in your own is a ton of pressure on top of all that. I'm proud of you, and you'll soon settle in and be comfortable again. Keep up the great work. God Bless

    @jongunzel@jongunzel Жыл бұрын
  • You're my tree-felling hero! I just felled a 30 foot Walnut and the stuff I learned from you helped me tremendously and saved my bacon.

    @MikeFixesStuff@MikeFixesStuff2 жыл бұрын
  • Had a tree like that myself once and know what you were feeling in this video, or close to to it anyway. You pulled it off and learned from it...same as we all do...you stuck to it and accomplished the task...believe me when I say that you'll eventually figure it all out and that you are made for it! 😉 Thanks for the honesty and sharing your hard days experience with us!

    @rayclark9643@rayclark9643 Жыл бұрын
  • The honesty of your videos alone makes it worth subscribing. Very grateful you posted this rather than hid the video from view. But on top of that, the free education you're providing and just watching a guy felling and bucking trees. I'm a follower, for sure.

    @OnceUponAnotherTime@OnceUponAnotherTime26 күн бұрын
  • Congratulations on your new business. I wish you all the success you can dream of.

    @justanotheridiotredneck@justanotheridiotredneck2 жыл бұрын
    • Wow that’s so kind! Thank you!

      @GuiltyofTreeson@GuiltyofTreeson2 жыл бұрын
    • @@GuiltyofTreeson scribe from the front on both sides. Go get a small string line level and permenantly glue it to the saw so you can gauge your level. Then join the two lines from the back. Good job and thank you for the video!

      @manscapeball4509@manscapeball45092 жыл бұрын
  • Learning from and sharing a humbling experience helps everyone doing tree work. Thank you for the honesty, and be safe up and out there.

    @daviddogruel7851@daviddogruel78512 жыл бұрын
  • This is what makes your vids great, brother! You're honest and interested which makes you our ambassador to understanding; the worst teachers are proper experts in their field, the best teachers are students, themselves. Thank you for asking our questions and deepening our understanding as you go! I've learned a lot esp the long videos of you asking the experts your questions - more of those, please! You're creating a learning series for a new arborist. It's a gift to education and I cant thank you enough, especially for sharing your struggles.

    @phrenologisto@phrenologisto Жыл бұрын
  • I watch so many of your videos and think man it looks so much easier when you do it than when I do, so its nice to know you are human too. But it's all a part of life, and sometimes we need that little bit of humility to keep us grounded and moving. Honestly a great video and one that I enjoyed so much. Thank you so much for sharing your experiences with us, I learn something new every time I watch.

    @bryansimmons3723@bryansimmons3723 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey man, really good seeing honesty in an industry of show offs! Been loving your videos from New Zealand! Little tip with the 4:1, use a Prussik instead of putting a bowline on the line and (as you mentioned) have your progress capture on your anchor. This way you can pull till the pulleys touch then push your system back up the rope to get more pull. Especially helpful if you’re running low on rope to work with. Happy to make a video if this isn’t clear! Nice one mate! Onwards and upwards!

    @joshmicallef8148@joshmicallef81482 жыл бұрын
  • You are good at it! Don't beat yourself up, s*** happens. You had the jitters, don't let this get you down. The tree hit its spot, the house isn't damaged, and you and all involved are safe. The only advice I can give is in a couple days when you shake this off, watch this video. You learned things today that will keep you with us for a long time. Love watching you. Be safe and God bless.

    @johnhardt5016@johnhardt50162 жыл бұрын
  • I just passed my small felling course today and got home with a coffee and this is the video that pops up in my feed. I've been super critical of my hinge and back cuts and this just goes to show that no matter your experience, you can't get them right all the time which really gives me some perspective. Thanks for your honesty and showing what happens in the real world. On the plus side as everyone's mentioned, you've finished the job right and you're safe and that's the important thing.

    @olivermadariaga988@olivermadariaga988Ай бұрын
  • Absolutely love your humble attitude! When someone thinks they know everything, they have absolutely STOPPED learning. You get it! You know you still have stuff to learn. That being said, I've been dropping trees for over 5 decades and you should give yourself a little credit. You know a lot for a young man about felling trees ;) Stay safe!

    @sgtpete55@sgtpete5520 күн бұрын
  • Good job; happy to see you striking out on your own. I know the “OMG what have I gotten myself into” feeling. I went from being a partner in a very large company to me, myself and I. I appreciate your down to earth honesty.

    @BruceThee@BruceThee2 жыл бұрын
  • Been there man! Don’t beat your self up!! A old head once told me you learn something on every job you go on, if you don’t it’s time to get out of tree work! Went the right way no one got hurt. A+ job in my book brother!🤘🏻

    @dylancarter7616@dylancarter76162 жыл бұрын
  • Humility and the willingness to share our less shining moments is a rare and valuable thing in this world. Thanks for being real!

    @ericsophiea6481@ericsophiea6481Ай бұрын
  • This here along with the other video you recently posted of a stubborn fur was some of your best content. This was so personal on every level when being a owner operator. When your sure of yourself and take into consideration different variables and then we hit a brick wall. Then all our past learning experiences, training videos we watch come into play and some how the man upstairs works it out and we go home. I’ve been there so many times where your heart is in your throat but yet trying to stay professional and positive. Keep up the great work and please keep posting your content.

    @bennyhill7929@bennyhill7929 Жыл бұрын
  • I have literally watched every tree cutting video on KZhead. This is by far the best video I have ever seen right from the start of video you showed great humility despite being a very very competent arborist. This shows all the emotions and risk and skills required in this industry and was truly brilliant to see

    @ivanearley7192@ivanearley71922 жыл бұрын
    • Wow thank you so much that means a lot to me

      @GuiltyofTreeson@GuiltyofTreeson2 жыл бұрын
  • Mad respect for sharing this man. I know it must've been hard, and it shows a lot of character.

    @livelylawns3446@livelylawns34462 жыл бұрын
  • Great job for posting this honesty online. Hard job and you slightly underestimated it but you pulled it through. We can only learn from these humble videos. Thx

    @paulbrinkers4022@paulbrinkers4022 Жыл бұрын
  • Man I really appreciate your honesty. The fact that you feel that way will allow you to learn and get better. I honestly thought the tree was going to clip the house or something. You are better than you think you are!

    @compilecodebug6430@compilecodebug6430 Жыл бұрын
  • Going out into business on your own takes real courage and can be very very stressful, but you have to start somewhere. Well done Jake and your honesty is to be admired.

    @wdguild1@wdguild12 жыл бұрын
  • Every tree job has it's challenges. You did a fine job man. Congrats on going solo. I look forward to watching you kill it on your own

    @abandonhope@abandonhope2 жыл бұрын
  • Dude, look where that tree is lying... nobody got hurt and nothing got damaged. You Learned the lesson and will carry it forward. Great video!

    @MurphyWoodwork@MurphyWoodwork Жыл бұрын
  • Your passion for the work is to be admired. Thanks for sharing your ups and downs plenty of KZheadrs wouldn’t have uploaded a challenging job. Your honesty is so real. You did it your way and it worked. It can’t all be rock music and fast cuts all the time. Keep up the great content. All the best Pete 👍

    @boris100ish@boris100ish Жыл бұрын
  • I know the feeling. At the end of the day, the tree is in the right place, nobody injured, and a lesson learned. I like the maasdam rope puller for tree pulling scenarios. No maxing out on that and it’s cheap. Love your content, keep up the good work!

    @kentogreeno@kentogreeno2 жыл бұрын
    • How many have you sheared there teeth off of? Downside is also that you can only use 3 braid which isn’t very strong and super stretchy.

      @Normanntrees@Normanntrees Жыл бұрын
  • The outcome was perfect. The tree landed in a perfect position. Don’t be too hard on yourself. Not every tree is the same, they are challenging things to overcome.

    @colinratcliffe2454@colinratcliffe2454 Жыл бұрын
  • What a great humbleness and honesty you have. I have learned from a lot of my mistakes. But this one seemed to just be a tricky tree as well. All in all you got it done and did it without any injuries or destroying things. Keep up the great work my friend!

    @bluegrassoutdoors@bluegrassoutdoors Жыл бұрын
  • Priceless video Jake! In life, we ALL have had moments that make us stronger and wiser! Some experiences we never forget. As a senior, I can say that without hesitation. Thank you for sharing and keeping this tree felling experience VERY real with your passion, faith and sense of humour. May you always be blessed and kept safe. Finally, congratulations on your solo business venture! Cheers🍺!

    @NoristheCat@NoristheCat Жыл бұрын
  • It’s easy to share success. To share how well things go when they turn out smooth. Real life hits hard and fast and doesn’t care who you are. Thanks for sharing the struggles. It’s brave and inspiring. I have days with doubt. I doubt my skill, my intelligence, my grit. Did I bid it right? Did I choose the right strategy? Should I even be taking on this tree or is the client better off with someone else? Keep up your faith. Keep improving. Stay safe.

    @davidg7242@davidg72422 жыл бұрын
  • Congrats on the big move. Been here for about a year now and took down my first tree yesterday. Did it all safely but have an even greater respect and admiration for you and everyone in the industry. Thanks for inspiring so many. We'll be here for many more to come. Stay safe and have fun!

    @sergiodeluca4201@sergiodeluca42012 жыл бұрын
    • Nice job man!

      @GuiltyofTreeson@GuiltyofTreeson2 жыл бұрын
    • And now that I've seen the whole video. It's all good. Inch as good as a mile. I'm still learning . Those things you only learn from experience. Higher is better. Always!!. It always works that way. When you try to teach/show something. Just do what you do. Thank you!

      @lukependleton2589@lukependleton25892 жыл бұрын
    • Sorry I hijacked this comment. Got it confused with mine bro.

      @lukependleton2589@lukependleton25892 жыл бұрын
    • @@lukependleton2589 no worries man

      @sergiodeluca4201@sergiodeluca42012 жыл бұрын
    • Remember all of us had to start some where and it depends if u choose to become safe with it over time or a dumbass

      @pioneerman8467@pioneerman84672 жыл бұрын
  • Dude it take so much strength and courage to admit you made a mistake. A lesser man would blame it on something else but a real man admits a mistake and gets better and learns for next time

    @teamsycotik@teamsycotik Жыл бұрын
  • Jacob, you probably can't appreciate (now) how much you have and will grow from this particular experience. You added a ton of knowledge to your mind by this one tree. Moving up in knowledge is always painful and comes at a cost. Whether you know it or not, you are now a much better feller. Thanks for showing the real side of your line of work. Well done. Well done.

    @MrPabco@MrPabco Жыл бұрын
  • Well, that wasn’t click bait!!! God bless you Bro!!! You are god at it my maaan, one of the best!! This is how things work when it’s your first day in the job. Much ❤️🙏🏻💪🏼👍🏻

    @wolfparty4234@wolfparty42342 жыл бұрын
  • Attach your pulley closet to tree with a prusik knot. It will allow you to adjust your pulley nearest tree and if you pull the pulleys to close together you can capture progress with the static pulley then slide your other pulley back towards tree. That’s watch we use in high angle rope rescue

    @matthewrodriguez5748@matthewrodriguez5748 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video. Thanks for being honest and showing when things don’t go exactly as planned. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and wisdom 👍🏿

    @mattschnelle9330@mattschnelle9330 Жыл бұрын
  • Brother, this is the best tree work video that I have seen in a very long time. God bless... - Patrick

    @TreeMuggs_PatrickM@TreeMuggs_PatrickM Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks Patrick 🙏

      @GuiltyofTreeson@GuiltyofTreeson Жыл бұрын
    • @@GuiltyofTreeson At Nichlos Woodworking in Mass, we'd do Crane Logging outside Boston to just your average Road work for the Towns, but we basically just used Bucket Trucks or a Crane if there was any Doubts... We'd have some super super tough plywood and just make a track by rotating the plywood to where we needed to go so we didn't Ruin the Lawn! We got all the Real Tough Jobs referred to us in the State. If you ever worried its not going the way you want, and there's something it can't hit, piece by piece is the way to do it...

      @randyross5630@randyross5630 Жыл бұрын
  • Wow man what an exciting experience. Thank the lord. You gotta love the realism that was one of the best videos I've seen. Even not getting the tree falling over. Great work man

    @mikeolivo3145@mikeolivo31452 жыл бұрын
  • Having been there for the entire process of you cutting down this tree I still think you are an amazing arborist! I can’t even imagine what would have happened if I tried to tackle this one myself.

    @caryadams6645@caryadams6645 Жыл бұрын
  • This video is perfect in so many ways. Everyone is safe, the tree is where it needs to be, you learned something and shared it with us. You shared some valuable lessons. I hope you keep sharing.

    @jimhubbell8364@jimhubbell8364 Жыл бұрын
  • Congratulations on your first solo job! Wishing you a long, injury-free, and cash-filled career. Thanks for explaining what you can and not trying to explain what you're not comfortable with explaining. I feel too many channels put out content where they incorrectly explain or are flat out wrong... But thanks to their being confidently incorrect... People take it and try using the knowledge.

    @brettbarrett2533@brettbarrett2533 Жыл бұрын
  • dude, don't be so hard on yourself! everyone has days that don't go well in this industry. My grandfather told me it keeps you grounded to have days of struggle. And if you're learning on every job you do then you're doing it rite. be safe out there.

    @jaythe306snowmexican@jaythe306snowmexican2 жыл бұрын
    • Gotta have a bad day to appreciated the good ones. This mostly applies to me with tools, gotta use some crap to really see the value in a quality one.

      @FishFind3000@FishFind30002 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, your too hard on your self. Almost think too much. You'll dial it in.

      @jamesmooney5348@jamesmooney53482 жыл бұрын
    • Cool if this is true then I'm fully 100% grounded haha

      @edwardrook8146@edwardrook81462 жыл бұрын
  • Dude, we've all been in that exact same situation. You do it right and the tree won't drop. Don't sweat it.

    @Highlander111172@Highlander1111722 жыл бұрын
  • never give up Jacob, thanks for sharing. great lesson and glad you did not get hurt.

    @bentickner1@bentickner1 Жыл бұрын
  • We should always be learning, great job!! Love your honesty!!

    @redbeardtree1776@redbeardtree17762 жыл бұрын
  • one definitely needs the strength of 5 men to do tree work alone. people really appreciate honesty - even if / especially if it goes pearshaped - the recovery to get up and ride again - that counts.

    @kadmow@kadmow2 жыл бұрын
  • As a new business owner on my own working solo I feel this so much. Thank you for posting! Also, I have absolutely been right in your shoes with a tree too. Leaning over a barn on a windy day with an inadequate jack and not enough wedges. All the prayers you say pumping and beating those wedges and then the relief when the tree is on the ground, Sure is wonderful when God gives you those victories. Good job! I really enjoy your videos!

    @066logger@066logger Жыл бұрын
  • One thing I have learned in my 30 years of life, and it applies to everything you may do, you never know everything and you can ALWAYS learn something new. I have felt this way multiple times with tree work, I absolutely love chainsaws, climbing, the adrenaline rush, all the gear that goes into it, and all the hard work we put into it, but sometimes I question myself if I know what I am doing and if I should be doing it.

    @k_hoffman@k_hoffman Жыл бұрын
  • Awesome Job! You got it down and didn't wreck anything! Insurance these days is tough, Glad you were able to find some!

    @Morpheen999@Morpheen9992 жыл бұрын
  • I've done a ton of trees like this and it's never easy. You've left enough of a hinge. For me the hardest is also lining back cut up with the front one. I always seem to have a different angle. I use steel and plastic wedges btw. Every cut stresses me out still. And so it should.

    @rogervanalphen3114@rogervanalphen3114 Жыл бұрын
  • I actually learned more from this video than others. Failure or mishaps never get posted. That’s where we all learn!!! THANKS A TON MAN!

    @mitchellmarkt1761@mitchellmarkt176121 күн бұрын
  • Hey buddy it’s so good to see you again. My brother told me you were back. We’re all learning, always learning, and we all have bad days at work. It’s ok to beat yourself up for a while, reinforce the learning,sure, but then put it in the book and move on to the next job. You can’t keep a good man down. You are so good to the people around you, that’s what I like about your videos. Be good to yourself. I hope your new business goes well and you keep getting a buzz out of it!

    @kiwich66@kiwich66 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey, Jake. Logged in (I never log in to KZhead) just to drop something you may find useful. When I'm taking trees out by myself, I use a Maasdam rope puller clipped to an earth auger anchor set in the ground(one of those really heavy duty ones they use to anchor trailer homes). This allows me to pull a tree any direction I want without needing another tree to anchor to. The rope puller has worked perfectly for me every time, even with some trees with significant lean. Just make sure you have that anchor set in deep and you can put as much force as the Maasdam rope puller can output (3/4 a ton). I often don't even need any wedges. Anyway, thank you for the videos. I know you aren't the guy to like a lot of pats on the back, so I'll just say "Keep it up!" And keep talking about Him and letting Him lead you. In the end, it's all that matters, brother. ~~Jesus Loves You~~

    @ethobling9548@ethobling95482 жыл бұрын
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