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samwise

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Posts posted by samwise

  1. Panasonic lumix, they own leica now i think so lots of technology crossover! The lx5 being the obvious choice! Just remember high megapixel values dont count for anything if the camera has a poor sensor!

  2. Instead of tying the rope to the bits you cut and rig which can take time.

     

    Use slings and have a rigging plate attached to the end of your lowering line so you can clip the slings to the rigging plate with a karabiner. This is a lot easier and faster to tie and the groundies just have to unclip the biners and send them back up on the rigging rope.

     

    This way you are not waiting in the tree or your groundies to untie knots.

     

    edit. this also means you can clip more than one bit to the rigging plate.

     

    You surprise me sometimes Mr King, sounds like a good idea, got a spare rigging plate kicking about at work, will give it a bash! Showed a colleauge your timber hitch trick(put wraps in rope before putting around lowering point) the other day and he almost cried, rarely lowered as he said tying that knot took too long, shocker!

  3. No problem with that part of the harness but have found the bridges stitching comes apart pretty quickly. The beefier bridge from my dragonfly made a good replacement though. Out of interest am i voiding any warranties by using a different bridge? It's still load rated equipment so i assumed not. All in all i think it's a good harness, perhaps not as hard wearing as some others but provides good freedom of movement once certain parts of the male anatomy are stowed correctly.

  4. lockjacks the dogs danglies, once it wears in,the can be a bit twitchy to start with but after having mine for 2 years now i would never go back to knots, it's pricey but worth it, it makes my life easier!

  5. Worked in Perth and Melbs, would never work in perth again, it's just so dull. Melbs is awesome tho and the cutters and climbers that side seemed a lot more capable to me. It was a good experience though and if you get an oportunity to go then i'de say go for it, as long as you like biiig trees!

  6. Yep, cut lengthways as much as poss to relieve that saw trapping effect, then block down as best as you can, they're absolute bstrds to work on! Not as bad as Cotton palms though in my opinion as they tend to be taller but still hang on to their dead fronds! If you can use a power pruner to get rid of as many fronds from the ground as poss that sometimes makes life easier i found.

    Good luck with it, hope you have a pokey disc chipper to deal with the stuff when it's finally down, it clogged up the big drum one we where using pretty much instantly!

  7. 50% of those so called disabled people are actually just lazy fat spongers.........Another pet hate of mine, lazy fat good for nothing ponces and pregnant teenage girls breeding for a flat.

     

    Spot on dude, used to do loads of council work in gardens for said oxygen thieves, which always involved large amounts of dog/cat poop! Used to hate it when you'de turn up at 8.30, start the saws, then get some vested chav pleb hanging out of the window of his free flat complaining about being woken up by the free work he's getting done in his garden!:mad1:

    Chipper getting clogged at end of day as you've been rushing poorly snedded bits of conifer through it always used to get me fuming.

    Muppet groundy bluntening the 394 on ground as he thought he was 'the man' by operating a big saw. Muppet groundy holding saw on full rev's to try to free it when it gets stuck in a stump he's trying to cut down ( The saw usually being blunt by this time from the 1st 25 attempts).

    Rude people, retard drivers, post office staff, kids who carve their name in trees, people who tell me how to do the job, people who want there trees topped to let more light into there garden! The list goes on, and i glean some satisfaction knowing im not the only person who enjoys a good rant!!!!:blushing:

  8. Go for it, never to old.

    I used to work as a manager in a local tesco and went to work everyday feeling rubbish, since i changed to tree work 2years ago and i've never been happier.

    I would say, be prepared to start off on pretty poor money until you're experienced, its frustrating at times, but guess it's the price you pay for doing a job you enjoy, and as you've said, money aint everything. Go for a rec climb first tho, see how you fare for sure!

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