It has been wet here in Eaton County.
We got 2 inches of rain in the last 48 hours and the weather-guessers assure us that we will be getting another inch in a couple more days.
Holes in the ground show the water-table is about 6" below the surface.
Pruning
Some of my pruning benefits from the use of a step ladder.
Since our local deer happily browse up to the 5'-6" or 6' line, the productive branches must be above that height even when carrying a full fruit load.
Since it is arduous to pick fruit that is higher than 10' above the ground, that results in all of the "interesting" pruning happening in that 6'-to-10' zone.
Sadly, I am a scant 5'-9" tall.
This time of year the challenge in pruning is finding ground that is firm enough to support the feet of the ladder, especially the skinny legs that stabilize the unit.
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| The side with the cross-pieces for the feet are much wider than the other side. |
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| A leg on the stabilizing side. Taken from the same distance to give you a size comparison. When I am at the top of the ladder, most of my weight is supported by these skinny legs. |
Since Sunday is a day-of-rest, I cheated a little bit and did a tiny bit of carpentry.
My largest step-ladder is 24-1/4" wide on the side that stabilizes the unit.I found a piece of 5/4" thick, 6" wide, treated, yellow-pine decking in my inventory and cut a 36" length. I added a length of 2X2 to provide a cleat to arrest the tendency of the feet to inch forward.
Why so long? Kalishnikov's Constant: Clearance is good. If 25" is good-enough when everything is perfect and 28" is good-enough when one thing goes wrong...why not aim for 6" of forgiveness on each side?
Yes, I know that I could have added side-cleats to trap the feet but then it becomes ladder-specific. This one is so simple that it will work for all of mys step-ladders.
I climbed to the top of the ladder and wiggled a little bit. It felt really good. I should have done it years ago. It used scrap wood and took about 15 minutes.





Just be careful. I see some of my worst injuries in ER from ladder accidents....almost always involving "older" people.
ReplyDeleteNice trick!
ReplyDeleteI being old but still stupid young in me brain just use a scrap of 3/4 ply and call it done!
I hope I don't need to visit Dan!
Unstable ladders are a particular fear of mine.
ReplyDeleteAn excellent solution!
ReplyDeleteAlso, thank you for the video you posted some time back (Mich St Extension??) of the guy pruning a severely overgrown apple tree. I did not know of the three-legged ladder before that. No "rocking" on any terrain. Of course you would still need your solution for soft ground. The video gave me confidence to brutally trim a neglected apple tree in my pasture.
Ahh! The old “necessity is the mother of invention” routine pops up again!
ReplyDeletePole Saw .
ReplyDeleteYou don't have t climb (or not as high)
I use this one and am happy with it:
https://www.amazon.com/BLACK-DECKER-LPP120B-Lithium-Pruning/dp/B00AZW9Y8C/ref=sr_1_1?crid=3MLK6QMBO8ZTH&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.tdXGPEygnBXpMokBoXnSLaWTv2OSxaXFKTHEOC89MHM_WvMSsB6u5EBt7I94kPBaTvM78xt5Un0LgTcmuK8l-ET8ZdY6upz37yxP1fj8iVuDmfwRng7mYfDEp3Y3maifYhO2RZfrDKeGMgmwhPv2HMGM5urdb9qlzIhv8w8vfssL0Q9pjfZgr1gzUxRj-lbNNPbJ9cWC6VicsCIihN_j-lTYG4FR3aih9qGA2y8Oexc.DxvflTDzEbOrjB4O_hJGZkIUBPJktEfyPjKKjE9Mgdw&dib_tag=se&keywords=black%2Band%2Bdecker%2Bpole%2Bsaw&qid=1773058481&sprefix=black%2Band%2Bdecker%2Bpol%2Caps%2C203&sr=8-1&th=1
I am stealing g that URL as a password.
ReplyDeleteI am already using that one.
DeleteJust add an X to the end and you can use it too.
Arkansas Mike