Just tried the Pantin!!

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
TREETX

TREETX

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
May 23, 2002
Messages
1,755
Location
home
I am glad you like the geriatric device. I am too lazy to climb 2x the rope I have to just for giggles.

Different styles and no ONE way that is best for everyone. I love this job!
 
Tree Machine

Tree Machine

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 8, 2002
Messages
4,293
Location
Indianapolis
TreeTX said a lot in those few words.....

All these years at arboristsite, I watch men struggle up this learning curve. Old ways die hard, but for everyone coming in, the old ways are your 'New Way'.

I shake my head, and I love y'all. Everyone stay safe.
 
VTMechEng

VTMechEng

ArboristSite Member
Joined
Feb 26, 2004
Messages
77
Location
none
I have been eyeing the pantin for a while now and saw a guy use one last summer with great success at a climbing competition. For me doing a static footlock is still the fastest and man is it a full body work out but then I learned to climb without spikes. I didnt even put spikes on for the first 6 months of employment. I may have to try and get my hands on a pantin for a test run, anything to save energy sounds great to me!
 
Tree Machine

Tree Machine

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 8, 2002
Messages
4,293
Location
Indianapolis
The past still lingers into our future

Using traditional DbRT, it really doesn't matter what bells and whistles you attach to it, it's still slow and twice the work of alternative systems. Some day we'll reflect on how hard it 'used to be'. For now, that's where we are, not all of 'we', but still most from what I can gather.
 
Burnham

Burnham

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Dec 10, 2002
Messages
313
Location
western Oregon
TREETX said:
I am glad you like the geriatric device. I am too lazy to climb 2x the rope I have to just for giggles.

Different styles and no ONE way that is best for everyone. I love this job!

You can use the Pantin SRT just as easily as DRT...no need to go slow. I am with you 100% on the 2x rope climb deal.
 
Koa Man

Koa Man

Kahuna giganticus
Joined
Oct 8, 2003
Messages
1,543
Location
Kailua Hawaii
Having your groundman set a 12 ft. ladder against the tree is usually enough to get to the first lateral of most trees here. Once there, climbing is easy. I always find the first 10 ft. or so the most difficult. At one of the TCIA Expos I saw a guy from Texas watching them set up a rope device and demonstrating how it worked. I laughed when he told the guys, "I can have my groundie set a 28 ft. extension ladder against the tree and be cutting before you even set your rope."
 
MasterBlaster

MasterBlaster

TreeHouse Elder
Joined
Jul 4, 2003
Messages
11,817
Location
Bayou Country
Koa Man said:
Having your groundman set a 12 ft. ladder against the tree is usually enough to get to the first lateral of most trees here. Once there, climbing is easy. I always find the first 10 ft. or so the most difficult. At one of the TCIA Expos I saw a guy from Texas watching them set up a rope device and demonstrating how it worked. I laughed when he told the guys, "I can have my groundie set a 28 ft. extension ladder against the tree and be cutting before you even set your rope."


It's pretty much that way around here, too.
 
Redbull

Redbull

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Jan 8, 2004
Messages
934
Location
Kansas City, MO
I'm sitting here looking at mine and yeah, it will fit, but the device is facing the wrong direction. I suppose it could still work but I haven't tried it on my left foot yeat. The directions say right foot.
 
Tree Machine

Tree Machine

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined
Oct 8, 2002
Messages
4,293
Location
Indianapolis
Here's the critter

For those unfamiliar, the Pantin is the green device.
attachment_9214.php
 

Latest posts

Top