claydogg84
Minister of Fire
I cut these yesterday. They are pretty heavy the way they are, 4-6' long and I wouldn't be able to lift them.
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Looks like Oak. I'm guessing you didn't actually pick them up yourself? They have to be 3-400 lbs.

![[Hearth.com] my bucking back... [Hearth.com] my bucking back...](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/148/148102-23691834c52e511fd6121827e4232768.jpg?hash=fOHAWKrqoz)
![[Hearth.com] my bucking back... [Hearth.com] my bucking back...](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi3.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fy97%2Froundgunner%2FIMAG0427_zps2e7b8eca.jpg&hash=343500f398382eb984b31e7e7697ebcf)

. I also try not to work on the ground if possible but that can be hard. I also leave big ass trees for the people with stronger backs. Some other things I do to minimize the risks is to harvest smaller diameter rounds, smaller arm loads to the truck, (its not a race), use proper form when lifting, use a splitter on almost every occasion, when stacking, my arm loads are smaller. I seem to recall you are looking at getting a new chainsaw and someone on that thread mentioned that yes you can get to big of a chainsaw. So if bucking is straining your back maybe consider the weight of the one youre buying. As stated in my sig my 455 Rancher doesn't add to much strain to me. I think anyone can go big if they only process a cord or two a year but when your serious like you and I are it can be the repetition and volume that gets you! PS I never pick up 6' logs but buck on site. Hope this helps j7art2.