Aster wrote:Warrigul, Chronos.
Edited a bit there to avoid bringing up some old junk, I suspect you remember what?
Any doubt PM me.
No worries, sad it's come to that
Chronos
Aster wrote:Warrigul, Chronos.
Edited a bit there to avoid bringing up some old junk, I suspect you remember what?
Any doubt PM me.
Aster wrote:Warrigul, Chronos.
Edited a bit there to avoid bringing up some old junk, I suspect you remember what?
Any doubt PM me.
on_one_wheel wrote:I traveled across the middle in a Kingswood when I was young dumb and full of rum, kept a hatchet in my kit for over a year before I went to use it for the first time, had just cashed my pay check at the Kalkarindji road house and headed out for a cuppa, found the only little piece of dead wood for miles around and climbed this spindley little tree with my hatchet in hand to get wood for the billy... first swing it snapped the head from the handle.....Moral of the story is, if you buy a hatchet ffs get one with a metal handle or go without a cuppa and weld one on when you get to the next station.
Chronos wrote:A few fencing guys around running them no worries.
tucked wrote:What, chainsawing peoples fences so they get repair work?
Chronos wrote:tucked wrote:What, chainsawing peoples fences so they get repair work?
Ha ha, might be the case
headspace wrote:Make sure you carry a pair of decent leather gloves for firewood gathering. Some of that old dry stuff is very brittle and when you snap it off you often get a very sharp and very hard point.
Warrigul wrote:I have a big old direct drive muffler less Danarm I fire up to impress people occaisonally but I would never use it in the bush.
Warrigul wrote:I grew up with big saws in the days before chain brakes and have been fortunate in that I have suffered no injuries, mainly due to my grandfathers instruction.
Lyam wrote:Watching some of my neighbours do a bit of work here and there...