Lout at my job with the county stole my 32" Stihl. County property. I was not sad to see that thing go! We cut and split 71 cords of hard wood that summer at the Children's Home. I had no business cutting trees that big! Lucky didn't get one of my crew killed
I learned not to tie a big one to our big Ford tractor - it lifted that tractor and drug it 50 yards when it came down - but it did miss the fire station!
My job at the time was as a crew leader to teach job skills to the county's chronically unemployed --- that summer, 'how not to die' while lumber-jacking! They were good guys most of them - but some days it was like herding cats!
Stig
I went to college for lumberjacking at Paul Smith's. About half of the forestry curriculum was hands on, timber cruising, surveying, silviculture, logging, sawmill, etc. in sawmill class, we were slave labor at a local sawmill for 2 weeks. Logging class, we had 2 logging sites for 5 weeks in dead of winter. The college had when I went there 50 years ago, the nations #1 woodsmen competition team, and still always a top contender. Silviculture during black fly season
We learn't forestry with 2 man crosscuts and axes as well as chain saws. One of our first assignments was to buy an axe, and sharpen it properly (hours of filing, and more hours with stones) only to get it graded for how well you sharpened it, but also the grain and hang of the handle. Personally I couldn't find an axe with a good handle, so I had to buy a good handle to replace the crappy one
I'm wanting the big cc saw to power an Alaskan chainsaw mill, not to fell trees, the micro-burst took down 2 white pines, both about 32" dbh and 140-150 feet tall. looking to mill out some planks for making rustic lawn furniture, maybe some structural beams.