I completely get the need for GOOD education when it comes to operating a chainsaw... however, sometimes that education comes in the form of other peoples experience, over their lifetime, living with the tool on the regular? The PNW and its surroundings more than qualify. I didn't go to a formal training center put on by firefighters who follow a singular protocol for use. Learn and adapt is a strategy many here use for other equally dangerous pursuits.
I carry my Husky when I go to my cabin in NM. I clear 2-3 trees a year and dozens of branches big enough to require chainsaw breakdown. Safety first obviously (boots, gloves, eyewear, long sleeve shirt, long pants) and knowing how to read your situation will far more than not, keep you out of trouble. Reading a trees diameter, twist, taper, ground clearance, angle of departure, roll factor, total length, guesstimated weight, etc are key to being safe and reducing potential injury or tool breakage.
I cut mine into 5-10' sections based on size and diameter and then drag them off to the side with my rig and a Gear America 35k strap. I return later in the year or the following year and break them down to firewood and then haul off as needed to either my burn pile or to the cabin to split.