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| CLEAN
SHAVE Nordstrom first conceived the cutter in 1991,
after logging efforts declined. |
A Kingston, Idaho,
logger once blamed environmentalists for timber work shortages.
Now, he can thank them for opportunities in a more prosperous
career in brush and shrub clearance.
In 1991, when the local logging
market deteriorated, Dick Nordstrom developed a mechanical
brush-cutter bearing his name. There are three units now in
his fleet. Starting with a Caterpillar excavator 322BFC base,
Nordstrom replaced the factory bucket with a custom-designed,
3-ton cutting head. Attached to the excavator's 35-ft boom,
the work-tool attachment includes a 480-rpm, 1,100-lb disc
with 24 replaceable 61/2-in. blades.
The 60-year-old Nordstrom says
he has just signed a contract with Ground Force Manufacturing
of Post Falls, Idaho, to sell cutters overseas. Each unit
is priced at about $500,000.
Operating in high and low modes,
the 35-ft boom comes down on trees and stumps up to 16 in.
in diameter. A 125-hp Caterpillar 3056 auxiliary engine powers
the cutting disc, which rotates 270° side-to-side. With
the boom swinging back and forth, the unit cuts a 70-ft-wide
swath through brush as the tracked undercarriage creeps on
grades up to 55%.
Rather than stripping the land,
the cutter shaves away brush and debris 6 in. above the ground,
leaving light vegetation behind for wildlife.
Northwest Machine, Coeur d'Alene,
Idaho, converts the machines for Nordstrom. Rental cost is
$450 to $1,200 per acre, depending on ground conditions.
Nordstrom and his son, Jay, who
manages field operations when the cutters are at work, found
a list of willing clients in the Northwest. In Sun Valley,
Idaho, a Nordstrom cutter recently carved a 6-mile-long, 140-ft-wide
firebreak to protect the ski resort's luxury homes and condominiums.
Sun Valley fire chief Jeff Carnes estimates the cutting machine's
rental cost was less than one-tenth the $5,000 per-acre cost
of hand clearing. A federal Bureau of Land Management grant
included $48,000 for the brush cutter's rental, plus $40,000
for other area fire work. Carnes says the 30-day project was
completed in one-third the time it would take hand crews to
work in hip-high brush.
The cutter has tackled larger
jobs in Washington state, where it recently chewed through
400 miles of brush for Avista Utilities' maintenance crews.

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