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Saw-wielding helicopters keep power line paths clean

Ten rotating saw blades line the 30-foot trimming device that dangles below the helicopter while airborne.
Randi B. Hagi
Ten rotating saw blades line the 30-foot trimming device that dangles below the helicopter while airborne.

Over the past few months, some Valley residents may have seen saw-wielding helicopters trimming vegetation along power lines. WMRA's Randi B. Hagi talked with one crew and filed this report.

The helicopter takes off on an overcast day in Fulks Run.
Randi B. Hagi
The helicopter takes off on an overcast day in Fulks Run.

[birdsong, man talking on CB radio]

Trimming season is winding down for Shenandoah Valley Electric Cooperative. But recently, an MD 500 helicopter with an aerial saw was still flying around the mountains in Rockingham County. Each year starting in January, crews from the North Carolina-based company Aerial Solutions cut branches and brush away from the co-op's power lines. A 30-foot row of circular saw blades is mounted on a 100-foot boom that hangs vertically from the helicopter. It looks a bit like an electric trimmer you'd use on your hedge ... but much bigger.

[helicopter flying in]

Out in a hayfield in Fulks Run, Pilot Shawn Johnson slowly lowered the 800-pound saw to the ground, and landed to be refueled.

SHAWN JOHNSON: Most of the morning, we've been out in the mountains. It's the end of a long tap. … A lot of it's over water, in big valleys, mountains, you know, inaccessible stuff where you couldn't get a truck to it.

Johnson worked several different pilot jobs before joining Aerial Solutions, where he got another six months of training to learn how to fly with the saw.

Ethan Sarvis, left, refuels the helicopter in between Shawn Johnson's flights, which last between 45 minutes and an hour and a half.
Randi B. Hagi
Ethan Sarvis, left, refuels the helicopter in between Shawn Johnson's flights, which last between 45 minutes and an hour and 25 minutes.

JOHNSON: Yeah, after doing it for a while, it's just like driving a car. … I'd say the most challenging is when the wind starts blowing in the mountains.

Preston Knight, communication manager for the co-op, said the aerial saws help to serve their rural population. It's rare for them to hit something they aren't aiming to, like the power lines, but it does happen on occasion.

PRESTON KNIGHT: Hopefully we avoid those situations, and we do for the most part! … It requires a lot of training and expertise and navigating on the saw. … If there is something larger that happens, we'll get crews out there to fix the situation.

The main goal of trimming is to eliminate limbs and trees that might otherwise come down during storms and knock out customers' power.

IMG_2429(1).MOV

Video by Kimberlea Daggy.

Randi B. Hagi first joined the WMRA team in 2019 as a freelance reporter. Her writing and photography have been featured in The Harrisonburg Citizen, where she previously served as the assistant editor; as well as The Mennonite; Mennonite World Review; and Eastern Mennonite University's Crossroads magazine.