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[personal profile] learnteach
Ok, it's not a stump anymore.

Spent some hours digging it out completely. Ended up by flooding it, and moving the muck out. There's no dirt supporting it; it's held in entirely by the two conjoined roots in the back, which go through the post supporting the fence.

So, Goram it, now I have to take the fence down to get the stump out. That's about another 10 hours of work, not counting putting the fence back in place. (10 hours: clean yard, take fence down, dig out rest of stump.) If I use the chainsaw (which I need to return) on the unsupported stump the kickback would be dangerous, as I'll be leaning in to cut roots 2 feet below ground level in the pit, underneath another root.

Aaargh. This was supposed to be done within a week, so I could move on to the housepainting, which I was going to do before the rains came...a month so far, and only more work being created.

The next door neighbor and I have gone in on getting the fence fixed, so that fence is partially down. Joy and rapture. I'm getting to hate yardwork; I'm really tired of digging, and once I finish the tree, then there's the fence, and the front yard, and the back area, and the painting, and the trim, and and and.

FUCK. I need to get a real job so I can pay someone else to do this crap.

alksdjf;laskdjf;laksjdflaskjdflaskdjf;laskjfd;laskjfd;lasdjfkla;skjfd;laskfjdasdkfj

Ummm...No.

Date: 2005-10-17 12:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] learnteach.livejournal.com
http://www.thestumponline.com/enemies.htm

(Humorous, sort of.)

Well, the stump rot stuff takes about a year, and works from the top down. At best. If I drilled the roots and put it straight in, still figure 6 months. The tree's been dead two years already; some minor decay has appeared, but nothing significant. Especially on the roots, which are tougher than the walnut trunk. Walnut also is an exceptionally durable wood, containing compounds with retard bacterial growth. There are active termites in the stump (BAD for the neighboring houses; it's like a plague corpse of termites if they get better established...which they're not.

As long as the stump is up, and the dig pile is open (uncovered, moved, etc.) the floating dust will muck up (literally) any paint job.

The stump is on the front side of the house, about 3 feet from the sidewalk.

Figure another week of digging every day, and pray I don't find any more obstructions. Then reconstruct the fence, and begin dismantling the stump for disposal.

Re: Ummm...No.

Date: 2005-10-17 02:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anthraxia.livejournal.com
And then give the stump to someone who will cure it and eventually carve it into a harp.
Beautiful! :)

Re: Ummm...No.

Date: 2005-10-17 02:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cvirtue.livejournal.com
It sounds like it's going to be well-dismembered by then!

Maybe many tiny harps.

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