We have 1/2 acre of lawn in the middle of 2 acres of very mature oaks, with some pines mixed in. Her flowerbeds form a border between the lawn and woods across the whole front yard & half way down the side yard. The rest of the yard had stuff hanging low that was wacking me when I mowed.
Last summer we spent the best part of a day - clipping, trimming & dragging brush & limbs away. This was done using:
- a 6 ft aluminum step ladder, fighting to get it to stand level & steady in a mulch bed
- a normal loping shears (limited to about 1.5" diameter max)
- a Fiskars loping shear on a 5 ft pole (again, limited to about 1.5" diameter max)
I vowed to NEVER do this again.
"Dad is coming up from VA for Thanksgiving, can he borrow the chainsaw to trim some maple limbs away from Gram's roof?" We got a freak snowstorm so this project was put on hold.
For xmas I bought myself a Harbor Freight / Chicago Electric pole saw (regularly about 110) on sale with coupon for about 75 bucks. 1.5 hp, 7 amp, 9.5" blade. It extends out to 8' 10". I happened to have a 12" bar & chain from an ancient Poulan saw lying around. It fits the pole saw AND it has the guts to spin it.
Back to Gram's, on a cold blustery day in Jan, we trimmed Gram's maple. 6' Step ladder (on the sidewalk) + me + 9 feet of pole saw allowed me to easily reach 15-17' in the air to trim the long skinny limbs that were near the corner of the roof. Then I stood on the corner of the roof and shaved off everything I could reach. It took longer to clean up than to do the work.
This spring Mother-in-law wanted a few low hanging limbs trimmed. When she realized I brought power tools, the job scope expanded from a half dozen limbs & twigs to a half day of cutting & trimming. The big maple at the corner of the garage & driveway got a serious trimming, we took out a bunch of scraggly undergrowth & everything that was growing toward the garage and into the nearby cedars.
Once it was all on the ground I de-twigged (hatchet & machetti) everything useable and cut the stuff into 20" kindling sticks. The brush was hauled away to her compost pile. I went through 3 tanks of bar oil and came home with a half load of kindling in my D-max.
This little electric pole saw kicks butt, and had no problems spinning a 12" chain cutting stuff up to 8" diameter & running off a 150' 16 guage ext cord. If I need to use it and don't have power available close by, I'll throw the little 2kw genny in the tractor cart and go to town.