That's what I thought--small notch as you described. But that would depend on how thick the other side is, where you'd be putting the notch.depends on what the top looks like. Any widow makers up there?
IF I weree going to tackle that one...I'd go very small notch on the non-split side being very careful not to go too deep or get the blade pinched, then come from the split side towards the notch.
If there wasn't a reason that I absolutely needed the tree down right away and had to attempt something like that, I'd probably take NickW's approach-- "Might not be a bad one to let Mother Nature drop." If you seriously hurt yourself, your wood-hoarding days are over and no one wants that, we all enjoy it too much! 🤗Agreed, and it's really hard to say what we'd do, without being there looking at it.There's a judgement to be made about whether there's an adequate amount of good, solid wood, and where it's located, to do this safely.
Really, if you are asking, that might be a clue to look to someone with more experience, rather than getting some of your own the hard way.
Above all, be careful! Being a foot from a disintegrating tree is no fun, even if you get away with it.
I'm going to let nature handle it. No reason to take unnecessary chances.
Prudent move, leaving it alone. Agreed, it shouldn't be too long before it comes down..I don't think it is long for this world. I think that between the split and the amount of lean, there will be too much pressure to stay standing. My guess is it will crack somewhere along that split section.
I'd huff, and puff, and blow the thing down. :DHow would you go about dropping this one, or should I just wait for it to come down on its own?
Do you "lumberjacks" ever tie a rope or something on trees to make its fall "knowable"--just an idea here--no experience--just wondering...clancey
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