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solo tree climbing...


bareroots
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it's amazing what some folk do, I've always loved that photo of workers having lunch on the girders of the empire state building whilst it's being built.

 

Men on a Girder Having Lunch, New York City Collection Poster: 91.5cm x 61cm - Buy Online

That is a truly iconic picture, similar to the 1900's lumberjack stood on top of a huge pole.

Similar to this, does anyone know the picture I mean? Can't find it on t'interweb.

59765ee82a893_220px-Logging_Scene_Near_Bellingham_WA.jpg.6ca150660e6b4145c6797d1c6b19aa0f.jpg

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Good to see somebody at this, I was a mad tree climber as a kid and remember getting to the top of a monkey puzzle and feeling sick with fear when I looked down.

 

Keep the videos coming I enjoy watching them there great.

 

hey there Mark. You must be one crazy cat to be climbing a monkey puzzle solo.

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it's amazing what some folk do, I've always loved that photo of workers having lunch on the girders of the empire state building whilst it's being built.

 

Men on a Girder Having Lunch, New York City Collection Poster: 91.5cm x 61cm - Buy Online

 

I have a huge one up in the front room when i was on Wembley me and a few of the other erectors did a mock of it but somehow it does not match up to the New York skyline .:blushing:

Keep the vids coming its good to watch a skill like this:thumbup1:

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it's amazing what some folk do, I've always loved that photo of workers having lunch on the girders of the empire state building whilst it's being built.

 

Men on a Girder Having Lunch, New York City Collection Poster: 91.5cm x 61cm - Buy Online

 

Love that pic, but they would have fallen a couple of floors at most, not 700ft!

 

They were amazing though. 3 guys in that pic are Mohawk Indians, who apparently have no fear of height genetically?

 

Cool vids Bareroots. I still love a bit of freestyling low down, but wouldn't climb leg breaking stuff now!

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Last time I did a bit of free climbing was in a veteran pollard oak, climbed up and into the hollow stem, entrance approx 14ft from the ground. What did I find?

 

Wasps nest!!!!! Back out fast as I could and jumped/fell to the ground, cutting my arms on the bark and legged it!

 

Funny thing is, the time I was looking at it before, approx a year earlier, I found a bees nest in the ground nearby.

 

Also I'm allergic to both!

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Love that pic, but they would have fallen a couple of floors at most, not 700ft!

 

They were amazing though. 3 guys in that pic are Mohawk Indians, who apparently have no fear of height genetically?

 

Something I found... It looks like the genetic answer is but urban myth. Still, the thing is they did it. Not the reason why. More balls to them I suppose.

 

 

A Straight Dope Classic from Cecil's Storehouse of Human Knowledge

Why do so many Native Americans work on skyscrapers?

December 18, 1992

 

Dear Cecil:

 

What's the deal with the historical hiring of Native American Indians to work on skyscrapers? Have they all truly been blessed with a lack of fear for heights?

 

— Robert Wallman, New York

 

Dear Robert:

 

Nah, it's the warrior ethic. Really. But first we'd better have a little background. It's not just any American Indian who goes into ironwork, it's mostly Iroquois, specifically Mohawks from the Kahnawake reservation near Montreal.

 

The Mohawks got into the business by happenstance. In 1886 a Canadian company was building a railroad bridge over the St. Lawrence river near the Kahnawake reservation. The company hired a number of Mohawks as day laborers, but found they loved to climb around on the ironwork without any apparent fear of heights. Since it was difficult to find men with the moxie for high work, the company decided to try an Indian crew. "We picked out some and gave them a little training, and it turned out that putting riveting tools in their hands was like putting ham with eggs," a company official later wrote. Mohawks helped build bridges from then on.

 

In 1907 96 men were killed when a span of the Quebec Bridge collapsed during construction; 35 of them were Indians from Kahnawake. The dead were buried in the Kahnawake cemetery under crosses made of steel beams. Your average construction worker might have decided it was time to go into a safer line of work, but not the Mohawks. From that day forward every young male on the reservation was convinced that risking your neck on high steel was the coolest calling this world could offer.

 

The Mohawks eventually branched out from bridges into general steel construction, including office buildings. During the late 1920s a number of Kahnawake crews started working on skyscrapers in New York, and they've been a fixture of the city's construction scene ever since. Some crews--the members are often related to one another--spend the weekends on the reservation and drive down to New York for the week; others live in Brooklyn. But they'll travel anywhere if there's steel to climb.

 

Do the Mohawks really have no fear of heights? Their employers think so, and the Indians themselves like to make out as though dancing on some I-beam 600 feet in the air is no more disruptive to their peace of mind than stepping off a curb. Edmund Wilson, who wrote several essays about the Iroquois for the New Yorker in the 1950s, quoted one modest steel jockey's claim that he had "an uncanny sense of balance," and attributed their skill to "their earlier life, from threading forests and scaling mountains, from canoeing in streams rough with rapids. A very important factor is undoubtedly their habit, in walking, of putting one foot in front of the other, instead of straddling, as we seem to them to do. They do not need to make an effort in walking a narrow beam."

 

Far be it from me to make light of this portrait of the noble red man, but there may be a simpler explanation: they do it because it's macho. Evidence on this point comes to us from anthropologist Morris Freilich, who published a solemn academic study on the subject in 1958. Ordinarily Cecil doesn't take this kind of thing too seriously, but in this instance was impressed by Freilich's impeccable research methodology: he spent his nights getting schnockered with the Mohawks at their favorite bar in Brooklyn.

 

One night when they were all drunk the Indians admitted they were scared fecal matter-less while iron hopping; they just didn't admit it because of the above-mentioned warrior ethic. (They didn't actually say "warrior ethic," of course; that was Freilich's take on it.) Freilich pointed out in his article that the Iroquois warrior tradition boiled down to going off with the boys to perform insane feats of bravery and generally raise hell, then coming home and boasting about your exploits. The warpath being no longer socially acceptable, steelwork was the next best thing. Sure, it's one of those silly male things. But I'd say it beats joining the men's movement and pounding a drum.

 

— Cecil Adams

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