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RopeKnight

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Posts posted by RopeKnight

  1. Arbortec is holding up really well for me. Better than average, comfortable and easy to move/climb in. Love the ventilation and stretch. The outer protection that covers the front shin and knee is good and grippy to help get a leg up on a slippery stem. Good climbing pant that cooperates with my climb style and harness

  2. Sounds as if you need a feel for wood strength and trusting in that knowledge. Just do a bit more weight testing of your tip with your tip tighed below that and a lanyard to steady. King Kong your intended tip and read the deflection in the limb and listen for fracturing..

    Remember your angles, the more horizontal you go, the greater the force applied at the tip and thus more weight sharing needed between you tip and the limb you walk

  3. Arbclimber 5 is out.Arb Climber Magazine - Home

    The article I ahve written "Staying Alive" is the best we could do with the information availble. thanks to all those who have contributed to this knowledge.

    Here is a sample.

    OPENING “It is better to be careful 100 times than to get killed once." (Mark Twain)

    Staying alive and the hate of pain are at the forefront of this article. Hate of pain in reference to what we endure as arbclimbers and as has happened so many times in the past to those who suffered at the hands of death. How do we avoid accidents? We avoid them by managing fatigue, distraction, performance and applying sound techniques, tools or a system to ensure optimal performance. We have all suffered and survived moderate to severe physical trauma including; contusions, abrasions, lacerations, and bone fractures as well as the more common soft tissue injury to ligaments, muscles, tendons from sprain, strain and over use of specific body parts. Our scars should not be a badge of honour for our efforts but more a motivator to positively address performance. The following article is one arbclimbers study in preventing accidents through systematic method of anticipating failures, evaluating and pretesting practices and plans, controlling out comes, transitioning and applying solutions to recover/rest, to recognize stress and life threatening accidents. Pain is the symptom of a deficiency or excess in our routine, life and work.

    Anticipate, Evaluate and Pretest, Control Outcomes, Practice and Plan and finally Transition for failure as well as success. I say failure in the way that knowing what can go wrong is as crucial as to knowing what can go right.

     

    thanks again to those who contribute!

  4. Looks like you could cradle/basket rig it at the 2/3 mark and pull tagline and rig the butt.

    Tagline to pull the butt off ass over tea kettle.

    Like you said take all the weight off that is in the air or minimally supportive

    Best of luck with the tile I would suggest you will not be responsible for collateral damage.

  5. “It is better to be careful 100 times than to get killed once." (Mark Twain)

     

    What do you all do to keep accident free?

     

    I will talk out loud to myself so that my brain hears what it is thinking.

    Creates an audible feedback loop so the mind can walk thru the steps and see any potential dangers, look for options, make a safe plan, commit to memory, and communicate with others etc

    They call it Self-Talk and also prepares the mind and body for the climb and actions required similar to what Spiderman does.

    Cheers

  6. When you get to a point in the tree where the lead or limb is more horizontal than vertical it may be best to hang below or to the side to avoid rotating unexpectedely.

    I forget sometimes that you can climb the tree with out using the spikes-sometimes much easier say when negotiating dogs leg or crooks in the stem.

    Always remember gravity is your friend and learning to use it to hold your position is an important learning curve

  7. Very good idea. That's a fast way of clearing the stones around root buttresses before stump grinding.

     

     

    Sent with my iPhone from me, to you!

     

    Had a large Acer rubrum today and cleared all the gravel and the root flares

    with great success and managed to carve away one root well away from the concrete walk.

    Please be careful If you do put the chain on backwards the KICK BACK will take your head off. I used my 260.

    Took a short vid and will post if any one cares to see.

    Cheers

  8. My hands get dressed as soon as I leave the truck with Teet and Udder balm I think it is primarily lanolin with some antiseptic, it creates a really good barrier against moisture and cold. Then a really thin poly glove liner and rubber palm gloves or if it is really cold you will have to go to leather.

    Wool cap for the head or poly toque to cover the ears and back of the head.

    Scarf as well, the kind that pull over like a leg warmer so less risk of knottting/choking or snagging.

    Thin wool dress sock with a pair of work wool socks over that.

    Usually will wear three layers of poly longsleeve shirts and a sweater and depending if its really cold or windy will throw on a hooded shell or another sweater with wind breaker.

    The important thing is to be able to quickly moderate your temp through the work so you do not over heat and then cold.

    Having a jacket that can be removed easily and packed.

    Long john for the legs only come out when temps get below 15 to 20

    I love the winter and cold but if my feet and head are wet and cold it is no fun.

  9. Long ascent and descent - SRT

    DRt most everwhere else except when too much

    friction is being applied from the ropes crossing over many leads/limbs

     

    Many times SRT is actually DRt in reverse becasue of the necessity to

    double back on the single line to return from limb walk or ascend.

     

    Drt is easier when going vertical when one hand can capture progress thru the

    split tail and the other arm and legs are free to climb

     

    SRt is always easier when the rope is your only choice for progress and forces you to make use of

    foot, sternal and handled ascending tools where double rope makes it easier to hand over hand.

     

    Srt forces you to utilize your feet/legs more.

     

    SRt for chunking down also, it is easier than drt because you simply choke your tip plus with an easy retrieval

  10. Yr and 1/2 in my Scaffel.

    Will get two winters out of em but will have to shoe goe a few places

    where the rubber wore thru.

    Good climb cause the rubber is very grippy

    the hooks need to be beefed up a bit cause they bend out slightly when i wear the spurs

    was a few weeks getting used to the extra bulk but in the end I found them great at keeping me comfortable standing in tight crotches and banging around-good padding.

    They really neeed to dry out well overnight for the freezing cold the next day.

    I consider myself very hard on boots and found these to be a good match.

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