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Treework, winter 2010-11


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Apart from December, which was terrible, the winter was ok work-wise. Nothing spectacular, but just steady for the best part….and in spite of how it looks on video, we did have some cold days with ice and snow etc. Anyway, some footage from the days where I had the cameras. Bare in mind the 3 videos altogether take over half an hour to watch. Thanks.

 

Part 1: [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyM693KJVaQ]YouTube - Tree Work, Winter 2010-11 part 1 of 3[/ame]

 

Part 2: [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t3Rgvtg4cxs]YouTube - Winter Tree Work 2010-11 part 2[/ame]

 

Part 3: [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLoZxsalHKg]YouTube - Winter Tree Work 2010-11 part 3[/ame]

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Great vids mate, 45 mins of learning and now ready to watch the footy, it's amazing how much you can learn from your vids, I've watched your other ones on YouTube and the pine near the road looked like a great job, I really appriciate your time and effot of shooting them and putting them on YouTube.

 

Cheers ciaran glyde

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Fantastic!

 

How come you decided to switch back to using the ms200t rather than the husky top handle?

 

One day the Husky just stopped, I dont know why. I have fuel and spark but it wont run at all. I haven't the time to mess with it since. Thanks

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Again Reg, very informative ! Have you ever thought of producing an educational video in the mold of The art and science of practical rigging or the Gerry Benerak Working climber series ? Each time i watch your vids i learn alot but they also raise loads of questions. Not just on method and technique but also the on the management of jobs and thought processes involved. Personally i would be interested to have this applied to jobs from start to finish, although probably a practical nightmare with time/money constraints.

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Again Reg, very informative ! Have you ever thought of producing an educational video in the mold of The art and science of practical rigging or the Gerry Benerak Working climber series ? .

 

Thanks, maybe, but not for a few years.

 

If I interpret this correctly, I'm impressed....nobody has ever asked about this before. Yes it is possible to apply the same disciplines to specific tasks which collectively speed jobs up, almost every time. The trick is doing it automatically, like mindlessly following a set of rules, amazing how things take shape, same rules. Remember the rubix cube?

 

If I interpret this correctly, I'm impressed....nobody has ever asked about this before. Yes it is possible to apply the same disciplines to specific tasks which collectively speed jobs up, almost every time. The trick is doing it automatically, like mindlessly following a set of rules, amazing how things take shape, same rules. Remember the rubix cube?

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