Another season of riding is upon us and the trail-elves have been busy cleaning and clearing up the trails on this mountain.
I ride year round and take note of things or trail hazards that need attention. Other riders do as well.
At one particular trail intersection I’ve noticed a dangerous snag. Cedar, 80’ tall, full of woodpecker holes and wiggles to the touch. Not something you’d want to bump into with the grip on your bar. I could give numerous reasons on the pros and cons of leaving this hazardous snag…but I decided to safely drop it.
I asked two friends (riders) to watch me, fall this snag, at a safe distance. I usually swat a snag like this with another sound tree…but that was not an option here. This snag would probably be in the top-10 of the most dangerous trees I’ve ever felled. I would need all my experience to safely drop this snag. I recommend this to no one …not even the YouTube cowboys who call themselves Fallers.
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Safely down. If you look carefully at the butt there is a small amount of holding/hinge wood remaining which helps direct the tree until the undercut closes. When that happens you no longer have control …it’s gonna fall. Except a very small limb from a live tree was touching the top. This could be a nightmare situation …but it broke and the snag fell. Whoo-Hooo!
If I couldn’t have done this safely I wouldn’t have done this. Snags or rotten trees are the worst.