Biggles wrote:I don't see how secateurs are going to improve your rate of clearance. You might as well go for a folding knife of any description on the basis of efficiency alone.
A folding or fixed-length pruning saw (e.g. a Saxon 195mm folding saw — Bunnings have these) or a bowie knife (with its own sheath) is infinitely more useful than secateurs — almost laughable in their slow, tedious operation when faced with a solid wall of e.g. blackberries. You aren't on a leisurely cut-'n-snip in the front garden! Years ago (2007-9) in Victoria I joined working bees on track clearing in the Otways. Our weapons of choice were pruning saws used as slashers, some even using the aforementioned bowie knives. The progress was amazing, even for individuals working in isolation from the main group. I never saw secateurs on these working days. Some of the bigger guys also carried industrial chain saws!
johnw wrote:Reading the original question and background I'm not sure I see a problem. As a remote bushcare volunteer with NPWS and other groups for many years we often need to disentangle from lawyer vine etc.
Judicious use of a small pair of secateurs is usually the tool of preference and causes less damage than relentlessly pushing through scrub pulling down whatever the vines are connected to.
Also used for cutting bush away from woody weeds, blackberry etc to avoid collateral herbicide damage. The bush recovers well from pruning but not poison.
That said, I do not support unauthorised clearing of paths through the bush, I'm only referring to the odd snip to disentangle yourself.
I agree with Moondog that Felco are the Rolls Royce if you want to spend $$$, but I've found the cheap and lightweight Saxon secateurs from Bunnings will do the job for this sort of occasional use.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Zapruda is correct. If in a NP even freeing yourself from scrub by cutting the fauna is illegal.
If you can't deal with scrub stay on track.
Moondog55 wrote:ILUVSWTAS wrote:Zapruda is correct. If in a NP even freeing yourself from scrub by cutting the fauna is illegal.
If you can't deal with scrub stay on track.
I think you mean "Flora"
Moondog55 wrote:I had this weird mind picture of some sadistic person cutting the feet of endangered small mammals
stry wrote:Is lantana an introduced plant ? Certainly blackberry is, but I don't think it matters to the discussion.
wildwalks wrote:I must admit -- my mind went straight to how do we clean whatever you are cutting with to not spread disease to the plant been cut.
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