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MOG
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Don't think I've said it yet Mog, but congratulations bro!

Ross told me you were just a tree killing work climber who would struggle finding his way around a tree without a 660 hanging from your harness.*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

* I may have made that up.

 

 

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Love that **** Bolam

 

 

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Does a felling cut at the base still count as getting the casualty down?

 

 

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Hahahahaha!

I'm not a forester Joe!

 

Steve's a mate.

I'd zip line him into the nearest sixth-form girls college.

 

 

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Hi guys,

 

Don't know if I'm right in saying this but do you think there is also a cultural aspect to this too?

 

We live on a pretty dismal grey island where a lot of the time the weather is inclement and recession has hit our industry pretty hard in recent years. After slogging out 5 long days of climbing in the rain for very minute lolly, the last thing I ever wanted to do was to get my harness on and climb of a weekend to practice for a competition. Mostly I needed to eat and rest and work out how to pay the bills or do a weekend job to subsidise the climbing.

 

I can see the appeal of hanging out in a lovely landscaped amenity parkland in NZ practicing my throwline technique with all my likeminded tree climbing buckos who I share digs with having a few beers. It's just a little different here. Your most likely to get a load of hassle from local idiots and have a partner who has come to the end of her tether hearing about trees and climbing :biggrin:.

 

Through a lack of investment and cuts in sport education, interest in sport as a whole has declined- which is of course a crying shame.

 

Most guys I've met in the industry are dog tired and skint. They love the climbing but would take a superhuman effort to get out and do it without some financial incentive. Which is a shame as they are great at what they do and would put in a fine performance but I can understand why competing is pretty low on the priorities list compared to providing for family etc. Work is work- recreation is recreation, having heard the amount of hours some guys have to put in to make ends meet, it's a pretty difficult balancing act at the best of times!

 

a turn out of 17 sounds pretty good.

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Cunningham has a great point there, New Zealand/Australia have sport bred into them, competition is the norm plus of corse the loverly climate, our young ones can't even have a sports day without making it a "team effort", "no losers" policy, but that's a side point, I just want to know when everything is happening in good time, get that calendar up and running!

 

 

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Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
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