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Posted
2 minutes ago, Kent Arboreal said:

I don’t know for sure but I reckon the risk of mortality from cutting your arm off whilst hanging 40ft in the air from a rope would be a touch higher than from a case of the covid ...

How many one armed tree surgeons do you know?

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Posted
44 minutes ago, Lemonsqueeza said:

Hello, I’m new here.

 

what are your thoughts on aerial rescue with the social distancing rules?

obviously I’d carry out an aerial rescue if needed but should we be climbing non emergency jobs at all....

 

Can we perform our job safely? 
 

 

No we can’t, simple as that.

 

The following is just to be pedantic but also thought provoking about cross contamination 

 

if the virus lives on surfaces between 24 to 72 hours you can’t send a saw up to the climber, or rigging kit or untie said rigging line for (potentially) 3 days after the climber has touched it tieing it on. For that matter you can’t clear up what the climber has cut n chucked as they have touched it.

the saws, tool box and door handles on the truck, the chipper controls, fuel can etc can only be touched by one person. 
arial rescue at 2m apart ?


gloves could help but once one person has a hole a glove or touched here face with the glove there offering little/no protection, is it worth the risk and Agro?

 

so unless you work alone or all come from the same house you can’t social distance properly in tree work

 

This wasn’t written as a rant but to get a watertight risk assessment for Covid19 could be hard going and without one are you leaving your self open to claims from employees/subbies for not keeping them safe? ?

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Posted
19 minutes ago, eggsarascal said:

How many one armed tree surgeons do you know?

had a pint with a one armed dishwasher once,  then we went to a one legged arse kicking party later on.

Posted
4 minutes ago, Will C said:

No we can’t, simple as that.

 

The following is just to be pedantic but also thought provoking about cross contamination 

 

if the virus lives on surfaces between 24 to 72 hours you can’t send a saw up to the climber, or rigging kit or untie said rigging line for (potentially) 3 days after the climber has touched it tieing it on. For that matter you can’t clear up what the climber has cut n chucked as they have touched it.

the saws, tool box and door handles on the truck, the chipper controls, fuel can etc can only be touched by one person. 
arial rescue at 2m apart ?


gloves could help but once one person has a hole a glove or touched here face with the glove there offering little/no protection, is it worth the risk and Agro?

 

so unless you work alone or all come from the same house you can’t social distance properly in tree work

 

This wasn’t written as a rant but to get a watertight risk assessment for Covid19 could be hard going and without one are you leaving your self open to claims from employees/subbies for not keeping them safe? ?

 

Constantly making sure you’re staying 2m away from colleagues can get really tiring I find. Being mentally exhausted from the anxieties of this virus while having to concentrate up a tree is a recipe for disaster.

 

 I had a flat out day today and it was almost impossible to feed the chipper/throw logs in the back of the van without breaking the 2m rule. We’re having to disinfect every tool after use.. jobs are going to take forever.

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Posted
8 minutes ago, Mark Bolam said:

All totally true Will, and absolutely no more dangerous than shopping, home delivered or not.

But the wife does the shopping ? seriously I think it has got to the point of

”don’t take life to seriously, no one gets out alive anyway” 

we can’t change it so just be careful and sensible. We’re not working with the tree work at the min

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Posted
Cheers mathew and that is the only one i have seen except the other 2 i have done.Where the secret is the distance between the ridge and the eaves coarse. Mine is well over a metre shorter between the top of the eyebrow  bottom eaves coarse and the  top ridge line.The distance from the fascia to the top ridge line on the main roof is 1.1 meters longer. How can one get the tiles to run in a straight line when you factor that in
 
Example if to have 10 rows of tiles and and they are spaced at 300 mm gauges which would give you a 3 metre rafter length give or take, Try and get those 10 rows of tines to work  at 2.5 metre rafter length in the middle of the roof then coming back to 3 metres the other end ??? in a straight line 
Well spotted Mathew.

Les I was going to say the one that kev posted, looks to me as though it has been 'planted' on, as I can see definite ridge and valley lines, that seem as though they have just been bodged over , whereas yours has the continuous flow effect that is needed to make them work.

Have you a formula for working them out or is it just tial and error. My head hurts just thinking about it. I love traditional roofing, but that would certainly test me.
Posted

Ended up doing domestic fencing jobs all week but having thought about it more wish I had just stayed at home or did a job bit more out of the way

materials now difficult to get hold of

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Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
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