-
Posts
3,087 -
Joined
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Classifieds
Tip Site Directory
Blogs
Articles
News
Arborist Reviews
Arbtalk Knot Guide
Gallery
Store
Calendar
Freelancers directory
Posts posted by WorcsWuss
-
-
This is an awkward one.
Unless your sister in law actually takes on a productive role within the business I don't see how she can take a wage.
Assuming it is a limited company then her 50% of the shares can pay a dividend if a profit is made.
However, based on what it seems she has initially suggested, not only have you lost someone clearly very dear to you, but you will be financially much worse off if you agree to it.
If it's not a limited company then there is no company per se.
With the best will in the world it feels like you're about to get shafted.
You need to take some proper advice on this.
-
Same as the tanaka which I have.
Not light, crap oiler, not very powerful.
It's built for the American homeowner market I think where top handles aren't viewed as instant and inevitable death.....
-
Yes! You!
I've PM'd you my bank details if you could just refund me the damage you have caused to my bank account.
:lol:
And you think you've finished with the big spending! :lol:
-
Well all this is WorcsWuss's fault! Here is my kit so far....
Bloody hell! Really?!?!?! :lol::lol:
You have been busy mate!
See how we're fixed next weekend?
-
Read a little of this description, google translate didnt do a great job. Husqvarna Chainsaw 365 66 cc / 3000 W / 8000 rpm Gasoline Engine Chain saw | eBay
This bit is my favourite....
2. The fire-fighting air filter every 25 hours need to dust once, if you encounter special circumstances, to allocate. Foam filter clean can be used? Blow right Zha ramming ? laid the watch Hou ? based qiu ? qiu tree ? dogwoods office for ? slow ? sell column for ? rich ? stop ? brown ? Ying jie screen ? figure pure sand pathetic?
-
I think we could argue all day long that everything potentially affects others.
And that's how we got into the bonkers situation we're in now in the first place.
If it means that only if you are making decisions for others are you covered by h&s law then that will be alright, ie running a company and providing equipment for use by your employees, or accepting works which your employees are obliged to do, and anything in public space.
If a collective of self employed people are working together in private grounds then certainly the only legal requirement should be common sense.
Reputation should then weed out the good from the bad.
I know, what an irresponsible suggestion!!
But we've been conditioned to recoil at such ideas and it's going to take a while to undo all the brainwashing.
If this is the start of it then it's implementation will earn my vote next time around.
-
Won't effect us anyway
Measures in the Queen Speech people will exempt “from health and safety laws those self-employed whose work activities pose no potential risk of harm to others”.
I think it depends where you're working but I'm inclined to agree.
I reckon that outlawing 'claims management companies' or 'accident lawyers' would make a far greater, and beneficial, difference.
It wil be interesting to see just what the bill means though.... Perhaps a 'step in the right direction' rather than any useful difference.....
That is of course assuming that left leaning MP's don't trample it to protect the bureacracy....
-
Interesting article in the press this morning....
Queen's Speech: Self-employed will be exempt from health and safety rules - Telegraph
How would this tie in with the refresher training for forestry operatives being discussed recently....?
I'm all for cutting down one H&S...it could be a great thing if it happens.
-
Nothing wrong with a well looked after Freelander.
My old man's on his 4th 'old style' one and not killed one yet. (Sister rolled one but that's another story)
Great little cars and brilliant off road....
-
That's it. I've decided!
I'm selling all my old toppers and buying one of these!
-
TBF its not really a "brilliant" idea!! Wardrobes have been around for a while.
Its well made though!
And you dont need to get some air vents and fit them, just cut/drill some holes?
Smart arse.....
It's 'brilliant' in that I hadn't thought of having a coat and welly cupboard outside
-
What a brilliant idea!
That would solve some storage problems I have at home.
Top work, looks great!
-
Is it CE rated?
What? Like the mk1 zigzag?!
-
Shouldn't the zz bit be 180 degrees the other way Tom, so the finger thing is at the backThe bottom link doesn't look quite right either have you missed putting the rope through it?cool idea, does look like bottom link is out or wont go in? defo would solve the pulley issue. great thinking and work
Tie these two things together and I think you may have an answer.
Although oriented the same in Paul's version it's located differently on the line by the looks if things so a link on the rope is gained.
You guys aren't going for the refund then?!!
Brilliant idea Tom, and Paul....
-
Good effort Ben
My sister's house was broken into last week and she says the copper who came out was brilliant. Suggested that she get in touch with his station, give them his collar number and ask them to pass on her thanks.
As pointed out, lots of people complain but few take the time to recognise a job well done.
As well as giving someone a lift from knowing their efforts are appreciated, it should also encourage them to keep doing it, which is great all round.
I know it works on me!!
-
Was it central services? He has been a member on here (several times!) and from what I hear his stuff is excellent (although his forum record is less good!) but it's a gamble.
To be honest, for the cost I always buy manufacturer stitched ones.
-
Annoying! Order came, paid a little extra for Saturday delivery so I could use it tomorrow and Monday. Guess what! I missed the two friction ropes off the list I wanted! Extremely annoyed now.
You can come and grab some cord off me if you need mate.
-
More than welcome Craig, it was a pleasure and great to meet you.
It was however a very limited introduction for you unfortunately but better than nothing I guess!
The ARB show is coming up soon, that's only down at Cirencester so just a hop down the m5 for us. I'm going to try to get down this year if I can. If you can wait till then you should get to see everything, and probably get a deal on stuff....
A couple of the lads had Treemotions here the other week. It's a lovely harness, as pointed out brilliant if you hang heavy gear off it and sit in it all day, but rec climbing is more about freedom of movement rather than comfort when suspended in my view, and I reckon the tm feels like overkill. And it's expensive!
The new version might be a possibility though......
Of course, if you can try one and fall in love with it then you know the answer!
Whats wrong with a pen and paper? Seems a complicated spreadsheet to me.At least you have got some excel skills to fall back on if tree work goes quiet for you.
DUDE! It's GOT to be a spreadsheet Pen an paper indeed... I love a good spreadsheet.....
-
who care's what the EU says?...we'll be out of it within 5 years
Let's bloody hope so!
-
Nod at Treeworker does splicing courses Craig.
One day, when I find the time, I'd like to get on one.
He advertises on the right somewhere.
-
Never Si
My one true love is and always will be the rope wrench mate
Sent from my iPhone using Arbtalk Mobile App
Phew, 'cos if you'd have been taking what Alasdair's been on then we'd have been forced to have you put down.....
-
I think i see what you mean now buddy, the wrench shouldn't drop much below 90 degrees to the tether when ascending? With mine, when you put you weight back on, the hitch fully bites just before the wrench is the the fully up position. It seems to work ok like that!? Will be having a proper go on it on Friday so will find out more then. Looking forward to meeting up with Adam to see what one working at its best is like!
Sounds spot on.
To be honest I've got into the mindset of neutral=bad but actually, when Kevin developed it with a soft tether it would have spent lots of time disengaged so I don't know what I worry for! So long as it shares the friction when descending then all is well with the world.
I thought we'd lost Adam to the bitch hiker now....?
-
Give her the cash then, and a lift to Buftons.
She won't be seen with her dad in public these days, too embarrassing apparently......
And I know what she'd do with the cash.... It wouldn't include 'anything she'd been told to do'
-
I'm pretty sure that you don't need cs30 + tickets to buy a saw. Only the toppers.
Not even that. Tickets are only used buy stihl & husky as a way of making sure that saws sold without a handover procedure are only sold to people who know what they're doing, in my experience.
For toppers everyone talks about needing 39 but I don't think that's strictly true, there's no legal requirement. The flying squad aren't going to crash though your window the second your card payment clears. And my 11 year old daughter could walk into Buftons I daresay and buy a 150t as a present for me if she had the cash in her hand.
I wish....
snake anchor or Sirius multisaver?
in Climbers talk
Posted
Multi saver is not great on a stem in my experience, it doesn't choke in standard set up like the pulley saver does. You can feed it through its own prusik a la backwards pulley saver but retrieval will be difficult if not impossible.
Snake anchor chokes on in basic form but again, in this arrangement is not retrievable.
If you want a retrievable friction saver to choke onto a stem and be retrievable then it has to be pulley saver or rope guide.
I use my multi saver the most as a cambium saver. Snake anchor really only sees use as a base anchor. Pulley saver comes out for dismantling multi-stemmed stuff.
There's no reason why you couldn't clip a small ring into the snake anchor to make a conventional 2 ring cambium saver, but it's an expensive and gear intensive way if making up a 20 quid 2 ring strap.
Multi saver would be my choice of the two, although as Ewan days, fimblsaver might be worth a look.
Thought about a liteanchor? Very short though.....