Looking good.
I'd cut it off close to ground level and deal with the roots some other way (hydraulic jack, fire, drill holes and fill with saltpeter, add some top soil and forget about it, etc). Roots and dirt are brutal on chains.If you can’t get rid of it, make it prettier.
The stump will eventually come out in pieces but not until I learn to sharpen chainsaw blades. Root work is brutal on blades.
Until then it’s a flowerpot holder and step to the deck.
Do the HD sharpeners work or are they wishful thinking.
Not much help now (maybe a bit).If you can’t get rid of it, make it prettier.
The stump will eventually come out in pieces but not until I learn to sharpen chainsaw blades. Root work is brutal on blades.
Until then it’s a flowerpot holder and step to the deck.
Do the HD sharpeners work or are they wishful thinking.
On the leverage front, if he has a hole-shooter, he may be able to sink in a fence post to increase leverage. If it's trying to collapse, guy wire down to far edge of stump should be sufficient.Not much help now (maybe a bit).
I cut the trunk higher up so I have leverage. Then I use a sawzall with a pruning blade on the roots, blade right in the soil, cut a circle around the entire tree base a bit out. Not as fast as a chainsaw but fast enough, safer, less digging and less tool damage. Then I use that leverage to my advantage, go back to get any roots you may have missed, repeat as needed. I have taken down bigger than that one by myself with this method. Trees with true tap roots require some digging to get at that root as the final stage. Fill the hole with soil afterwards.
I have had some that someone else cut down close to the ground where I did not have leverage. I used the sawzall as above but dug a hole and put a jack in it under the trunk/roots--more work.
Option #2...If you can’t get rid of it, make it prettier.
The stump will eventually come out in pieces but not until I learn to sharpen chainsaw blades. Root work is brutal on blades.
Until then it’s a flowerpot holder and step to the deck.
Do the HD sharpeners work or are they wishful thinking.
A dozen years ago I took out an ash root. The neighbor thought I was putting in a swimming pool.On the leverage front, if he has a hole-shooter, he may be able to sink in a fence post to increase leverage. If it's trying to collapse, guy wire down to far edge of stump should be sufficient.
Sawzall instead of chain saw is a great idea.
My 'flat' is about 20' from the corner of my house, above a detached garage. the mechanical trench is 4' down, I laid 3 a 4" drain, and 3 separate conduits 4" PVC conduits for water, electrical and gas. The gas conduit is a spare as I have no need for gas, minisplit for HVAC, hot water from out existing 60gal unit, and a100A panel for my garage and apt above.They might suit your M-I-L as I assume she would still have access to the main abode for storage and chilling out. Renters that would tolerate the restricted space long term would concern me. Add the LTB and life gets ugly. Does a granny flat escape the LTB wrath and sloth if rented out down the road?
Family flat, no problem for when the firstborn needs a start on life. Possible WFH peace and separation option also.
Plumbing and drain hook ups down 5 feet won't be easy. Line to gas furnace or big panel upgrade for electric heat /heat pump.
Brick veneer avoids the trailer park look
I'd look at point of use hot water and a furnace alternate to eliminate the utility room and increase usable or storage space.
I have this one and it's excellent. Customer service is amazing if you ever have a problem as well. Including three pads (waxing, compound, polish) is a nice bonus as well.And to add…tried out some scratch remover on wife’s odyssey to clear up the scratches where the top box fell. Works great! Think I may buy a buffer and go through the entire car!
Wife was on a cleaning frenzy so apparently today was a good day to disassemble the entire dishwasher on the inside and clean it up…fun times. Disgusting…but learned something new.
I did an airplane (Piper Cherokee) with a Makita constant variable speed buffer. With the constant speed control it doesn't vary when you change pressure, minimizing chances of scorching. Got rid of 25 years of chalking.I have this one and it's excellent. Customer service is amazing if you ever have a problem as well. Including three pads (waxing, compound, polish) is a nice bonus as well.
That's one of the ones on my radar. LOTS and LOTS of them for sale on Kijiji and FBMP.
I impulse bought it to apply/buff sealer on the granite countertops. It's been 8 years, and I'm sticking to windex.That's one of the ones on my radar.
I bought mine to do my 13yr old black SUV and it turned out amazing. A little over a year later I was having an issue with the switch on it so I emailed the company and they sent me a new one along with pads no questions asked.I did an airplane (Piper Cherokee) with a Makita constant variable speed buffer. With the constant speed control it doesn't vary when you change pressure, minimizing chances of scorching. Got rid of 25 years of chalking.