In Cajun country, Shelby has found a huge cash of logs, but to get it, he has to navigate the paddle barge through a narrow canal surrounded by private homes and docks. On the Olympic Peninsula, Gabe goes it alone and risks his own life trying to do too much. Down in Florida, the competition is heating up as the Chapman team discovers someone is poaching their logs and the Dreadknots suffer a crippling injury when Kraken gets his hand caught in a winch. Up in Alaska, Joe is sent to teach new logger Adrienne while topping a tree.
s07e01 - Axes and Allies
s07e02 - Pain in the Ax
s07e03 - Burying the Hatchet
s07e04 - Out on a Limb
s07e05 - Swamp Man Sabotage
s07e06 - Large Barge
s07e07 - Father Knows Best
s07e08 - A Frayed Knot
s07e09 - Log Jam
s07e10 - Logger Down
s07e11 - Bombs Away
s07e12 - Who'll Stop The Reign?
s07e13 - Ax Marks the Spot
s07e14 - End of a Legend
s07e15 - Dog Days
s07e16 - Albie Damned
s07e17 - Tooth and Nail
s07e18 - Battle Ax
s07e19 - Trucked Up
s07e20 - Cutting it Close
Ax Men is the first-ever non-fiction series about the treacherous life of Pacific Northwest timber cutters. From History and Original Productions, the same team responsible for the mega hit, Ice Road Truckers, this series looks at the legacy that the pioneers of our country laid for the present and future generations of loggers.
Deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest, rugged men make their living doing one of the most dangerous jobs in history... Logging. Their mission: to retrieve timber perched on mountainsides too steep to access with machines. But this is no easy task.
For more than a hundred years, larger than life characters, many of whom are members of logging families that go back to the time when the West was being settled, have spent their days among towering trees and powerful machines and their nights in outposts far from the comforts of civilization. Ax Men will tell remarkable stories detailing the history of the logging industry, showing how technology has transformed life for today's logger, while the struggle of man versus nature stays the same.