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Tree Care Forums
Commercial Tree Care and Climbing
new climbing styles vs. old
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<blockquote data-quote="beowulf343" data-source="post: 462864" data-attributes="member: 9679"><p>You know what I love about this argument? In just the 11 years i've been climbing, i've seen some drastic changes. I remember when a split tail and a blakes was pretty much cutting edge. And i'll bet that in 10-15 years, the techniques that the "new school" climbers are using will be considered "old school." And what's even funnier, I'll bet that 10-15 years from now probably 60% of tree climbers will still be using a snap and taughtline because it's cheap, it's easy, and it works.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="beowulf343, post: 462864, member: 9679"] You know what I love about this argument? In just the 11 years i've been climbing, i've seen some drastic changes. I remember when a split tail and a blakes was pretty much cutting edge. And i'll bet that in 10-15 years, the techniques that the "new school" climbers are using will be considered "old school." And what's even funnier, I'll bet that 10-15 years from now probably 60% of tree climbers will still be using a snap and taughtline because it's cheap, it's easy, and it works. [/QUOTE]
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