Rain Days Mean Big Fires!

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Published 2022-04-19

All Comments (21)
  • So many feathers in your cap. Pondmaster, King of the fire, demolition expert, dam builder… shew !!!
  • @KenLou
    It's an impressive sight when the fire organizes into a single large column and burns so efficently that it barely makes any smoke. I'll bet you can feel it sucking the air in when standing so close.
  • Chris must be one of them outdoor survival experts, He barely rubbed them sticks together and they just burst into flames.
  • @mikeyb5581
    It always amazes me, that for as much as your excavator gets used, it still looks brand new! A guy that takes pride in how his equipment looks. First class looking equipment, first class ooeration!
  • @bitspieces3885
    And Chris said:”Let there be FIRE” 🤣🤣👍 Awesome video as always from the man.
  • @keithk8698
    Chris watching you work your equipment is amazing to see. I hope you never stop videoing your work.
  • @mikemiller8318
    Always nice to turn a rainy day into a productive day 👍🔥🇺🇲
  • @nandi123
    "Oh wait, I was supposed to chip that." 😂
  • I worked capping oil gas blowouts for many years. Seeing your machine at these fires reminded me of how hot hydraulic lines got on excavators and dozers when we were capping the Kuwait oil fires. It's amazing how much heat they can take.
  • @mykalmcb
    Clearly someone pissed Chris off about mulching. Too funny
  • @Vickie-Bligh
    I've seen several construction burn piles and no one took care of them the way you take care of yours. Nice job.
  • That was a very good burn video. Keeping it big but under control. Thank you for sharing the fun.
  • @timziegler9358
    There is an unexplainable sense of accomplishment when the brush has been finally eliminated. I too enjoy burning the brush. Best wishes.
  • @heatherlane9270
    Nothing lke a nice toasty fire on a cold wet day. A great example of working smarter not harder - all that wood ash spread across the field adds nutrients to the soil. And of course it's fun to watch a huge fire - what a mess the ash dust made of the 220!
  • @blaise2628
    If I'm not mistaken, last count I heard, Chris used just one galleon of diesel fuel to start the first fire . The rest of the piles were daisy chained to start them on fire that is without the use of any more diesel fuel.
  • @stevenkruse5746
    Thank you Sir for your many yrs of sharing. Your video library has become a new friend to me in my retirement yrs. May God bless you and yours --- hallowth be His name... Congrats on the new Volvo350
  • @RKHarm24
    One of the first and probably largest fire I remember was in your pasture prior to cows, you were clearing around pond and before you built the house. Living in a manufactured house.
  • here in SnoCo Warshington... we're not "allowed" to burn for clearing operations, (we can for logging sometimes) so everyone has to chip/grind, the big tub grinders burn 200 gallons of diesel in 8 hours, plus the 90 or so in the excavator to feed it (closer to 180 2 machines) then another 3-400 galons in the trucks to haul the massive pile of chips away to a dump site. moral of the story here, burning wood releases exactly the same amount of CO2 as decomposing wood, however, decomposing wood releases significant amounts of Methane (as well as all the fuel burnt to chip it), but our lovely PSCA believes that chipping is better for the environment