Hurricane Helene clean with big machine help to the rescue



Hurricane Helene clean with big machine help to the rescue

Two Women and Tools is a funny channel about two women working with tools renovating, repairing, working on fixer uppers, homes, and on several different projects. Looking at the lighter side of projects, we are here to help make your job easier, doable and less daungting. Perfect for anyone who wants to try new things but may be intimidated. Let us show you how!
However some of the projects we take on require outside help, heavy lifing and major build steps. So instead of not including those parts of the project I have included those steps-episodes. In any event the knowledge and planning of those episodes is something we are fully involved in.

My other channel is melanieheinrichstudios: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-VYEfK-pb8acuM2VnSVrzw

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36 thoughts on “Hurricane Helene clean with big machine help to the rescue”

  1. Brief Life History of Jesse James

    When Jesse James Bailey was born on 19 July 1889, in Bakersville, Mitchell, North Carolina, United States, his father, John Wesley Bailey III, was 24 and his mother, Eliza Lydia "Ida" Conley, was 15. He married Minnie Bessie Callahan on 21 June 1908, in Bakersville, Mitchell, North Carolina, United States. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 4 daughters. He lived in Red Hill, Mitchell, North Carolina, United States in 1910. He died on 26 November 1939, in Bakersville, Mitchell, North Carolina, United States, at the age of 50, and was buried in Loafers Glory, Mitchell, North Carolina, United States.

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  2. Wow, quite the change in a couple days. Those lil machines are powerhouses.
    I dont know you guys, any of the ppl working and im not even from there. This is about people helping people. Get thru the horrible devistation there. Idk why this is affecting me so much but it is. Im having a really hard time with it. But who am i. Im nobody. But im somebody who cares about the ppl in my country who are hurting and will be for a very very very long time. Eventually, some of the pain will subside for yall. Life may get back to a wee bit of normalcy. I will continue to think of you daily, pray for you daily. And yes, cry…..
    Tell those guys thank you for helping you, from this stranger…..
    I wish you peace. God be with you all. #NCstrong

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  3. Forest owner from Germany, great work you do but pls if you don´t know what you are doing and don´t have the right tools than don´t do it. Felling trees is something very dangerous and must be planed and executed correctly, if not you bring yourself and others in danger.
    Trees which break up while felling are extreamly dangerous, it´s called Barberchair and have cost many arborists life.
    If a tree is dangerous and you aren´t have the skill nor the tools at hand than mark it with tape everyone will know this is an dangerous tree.
    I have taken down hundred of trees but even me i have sometimes have to say i can´t do it and need someone with more experience or speclised equipment take over.

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  4. This is NOT a hurricane. It’s a thunderstorm that happened before Helene hit. Just the eye of Helene was way bigger than this. They did the same thing when Katrina hit. Seriously folks, use your brains. Samaritan’s Purse wasn’t even on the ground before it hit. You can’t fly helicopters during a hurricane.

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  5. I also saw another Headstone in the pile of rocks in the video around 25.10 minute. I could not read it though. So much tragic loss of life, people, wildlife, the standing people as the Native American call the forest trees. What a true blessing, beyond words, that God's people have come out to lend a hand to help heal the land and comfort his children in this tragic time. I pray for you and your sister that each day will be better and better with time. Know that we care and send our love and prayers to cover you in quiet, peace, comfort, healing, kindness, and all to the Glory of our Father and his son, our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Always, from Pittsboro, NC

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  6. I applaud the efforts of the volunteers, but I saw no one with a chain saw who knew how to properly use it. You can fell a tree twice the diameter of the saw's bar length, so that large leaning tree should not have been a problem to cut down. And once the trunk is partially cut, it is an extreme danger if it is not taken completely down. And cutting all that dirty wood, I hope they knew how to sharpen a chain or had a lot of replacement chains available. Cutting a log laying on the ground is a sure way to stick the bar tip in the dirt, and then it is immediately dull. There were other safety concerns I observed, I hope no one gets injured.

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