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Mr. Squirrel

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Everything posted by Mr. Squirrel

  1. Haha, been there. I was out on a limb and my lever fell off. The pin was still in place by the grub screw but the rest was gone, never did find it. Put an old short lever back on mine and never been a problem. I prefer them anyway for their resistance to the spider attack.
  2. Maybe mine is just a duff first batch saw, I wish it came close to the 372! They are both stock though so perhaps I should look at tinkering a bit. I certainly wouldn't turn my nose up at a 560 with added grunt. And the 372, oooh... The noise they must make though? What talented individual 'breathed' on it for you? Ha
  3. What have you done to your 372?!? 560 is obviously lighter with brilliant acceleration but is no match for a 372 when it comes to power...
  4. Me too, I'm going to start using opposing snap gates instead. Sounds like interesting reading though.
  5. I suppose that could be a bonus of the spikescender, given that is placed a little back. There is something really cool about a diy job though...
  6. But then the 560, even with an 18'' bar is, in my opinion, slightly obsolete in climbing. I do everything I can with my 200 & 14'' bar and then go straight to the 372 with 20'' for the big stuff. 560 is just a bit inbetweeny, and mine pretty much never leaves the ground.
  7. Mine runs an 18'' alright. It isn't crazy fast cutting but it's certainly not bad
  8. Bonkers! Well, unusual at least...
  9. Come along now, you must be pulling our legs? Isn't that just silly? I lived in Germany until pretty recently and its certainly not common practice...
  10. Yeah a friend of mine figured a snappy gate would be ok, until it unclipped itself and his saw feel out a tree. So long as it locks yer good.
  11. Haha, thought given climbing out of the mewp and into the tree is a strict h&s no no I'd leave that out of this thread. However the only reason I've been in mewps is when the operator couldn't reach the backside/internals and have given me a lift to the upper crown to give them a hand.
  12. Well now that is a sticky wicket. I guess all you can do is try and reason with them that mewps aren't the be all and end all, or start getting very imaginative with reasons as to why they are unsuitable for the job in hand. For every job. They might be great for wee trees, hedges and reductions but reaching the internals of a tree from a mewp is another matter. And the quality of work suffers I'd say. And mewps are girly.
  13. Every tool has its advantages, drawbacks and place. Mewps are no different I'd say. Comparing them as being faster/slower safe/dangerous is totally subjective to the climber or mewp operator on the job, and pretty pointless. I've subbed for a few firms who use primarily mewps and while they certainly have strengths they also have disadvantages. Far from being a 'macho climber', I simply see a climber as a far more versatile way of completing a job.
  14. I'd do exactly what the surgeon says, and nothing more. If they're vague see a physiotherapist, delivery but stages on the internet. I had keyhole shoulder surgery and was told not to even think about climbing for 6 months. Seriously mentally challenging actually taking that time out but it beats damaging the work done and having to go under the knife again. That might not even be practical...
  15. Great posts and thread, the stigma some people associate with mental health issues is probably one of the greatest barriers to healing. Personally I think the complete opposite, some of the people I respect most in this world are people who've been pretty brutally honest with what they're dealing with. And those are generally also the ones who seem ultimately seem to cope the best. I've had at taste of 'mental illness', through certain events initially I developed anxiety problems. I was fine so long as I was climbing, but otherwise I sucked at life. That anxiety merged into depression until I hit what I'm going to call rock bottom. Certainly for me. I was referred to a mental health outpatient hospital by my gp and after seeing (and rejecting) a few psychologists found a woman who seemed to get me. It took time but I'm better off now than ever before, I'd say. Massive respect to mental health workers, and everyone who has the courage to accept their help. Meditation, or mindfulness, sounds a bit 'hairy fairy' but it certainly helped me cope when I was at my lowest. I'm not sure where I'd be today without that. Regular meditation actually physically changes your brain over time, which Ihad no idea of. It's a small act but it can have enormous benefits. Some doctors will throw a whole manner of pills about all willy nilly, and they certainly have a place but I wasn't going to go down that route. Meditation was my medication, is not a quick fix but it's a step in a positive direction, I feel. I'd recommend 'mindfulness, a practical guide to finding peace in a frantic world by Mark Williams and Danny penman' even if you don't follow the whole books programme (I didn't) the CD and some of the advice is invaluable. Just my 2 cent. All the best fellas.
  16. I dunno, they're definitely easier on the body, but then they're faster too. So instead of spending half, even a whole day on a tree you can probably do 5, 10, more even. I reckon it'll balance out in the end.
  17. Looks like a satisfying job!
  18. I was climbing a larch when I was a kid and all four branches I was on snapped simultaneously. Took out a few below me as I fell but stopped myself with one very desperate hug. Stem is strong enough though. Similar thing with Douglas fir.
  19. Problem there is there aren't any truly remote areas in the uk... sure they've done it in some national parks in the states, but those parks alone are probably the size of Scotland. Won't happen.
  20. Too true, I think any tree surgeon worth his salt can probably cobble together something like good sewing. As for cleaning, brush, shovel, blower. Easy, no? I am good at doing a huge pan of spaghetti, turning it into chilli the next day and then having burritos for a couple days afterwards. Also do a man shepherds pie, Thai curry and a perfect steak. Meat and potatoes are definitely the most important part of any diet... for me.
  21. +2 for throw line. Would never leave my rope on the job over night.
  22. Agree on all points. It's knowing when you're not just a wee bit nervous and when it's a legitimate concern though I suppose. I remember subbing for a guy, being sent to a big oak. Half the crown had broken out at the first fork and there was a big split right down to the ground. The wind was howling and I was quite happy to walk away from that till a calmer day. Two days before I finished a contract for him while getting pulled off branches and thrown about by the wind, so I think it was fairly clear that my internal danger barometer wasn't set to 'pansy'. Moving root plate, water logged soil & wind seems a legitimate reason to walk, but principals won't pay the bills sadly...
  23. I use a ~5m strop, too long most of the time but for the odd bit of tricky positioning in single line mode it's well worth it.
  24. If the van's cold too I stuff my gloves down my trousers while I'm getting a line set, sorting out the site etc Maintains their warmth till I'm climbing and gives me a chance for some sneaky male private exercises... or just to creep people out.
  25. My circulation is pretty pants too, I've used the showa thermal gives and had some success so long as I've a dry pair spare. Generally I just spend winter climbing bare handed with a pile of frozen gloves in the van though. Which I find a little miserable. Will have to try out some of these ideas.

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