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Tree Care Forums
Commercial Tree Care and Climbing
new climbing styles vs. old
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<blockquote data-quote="1CallLandscape" data-source="post: 462921" data-attributes="member: 9763"><p>exactly..... personally i climb "old school" i learned from my father that has been climbing for 30 years and is still doing it at close to 50 now never and accident climbing old school ( knock on wood).. he taught me to always trust your gear to the fullest ( whethewr it is new or old) and replace worn out ropes, saddles etc. when in need. </p><p></p><p>i feel that you should stick to what your comfortable with but at the same time expiriment with different techniques and style. maybe not trying these on a huge tree , on an easy one. just like trying a new cut, dont do it on a bad tree. stay within your comfortability range but, always try to push your self to new limits.</p><p></p><p>-mike</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="1CallLandscape, post: 462921, member: 9763"] exactly..... personally i climb "old school" i learned from my father that has been climbing for 30 years and is still doing it at close to 50 now never and accident climbing old school ( knock on wood).. he taught me to always trust your gear to the fullest ( whethewr it is new or old) and replace worn out ropes, saddles etc. when in need. i feel that you should stick to what your comfortable with but at the same time expiriment with different techniques and style. maybe not trying these on a huge tree , on an easy one. just like trying a new cut, dont do it on a bad tree. stay within your comfortability range but, always try to push your self to new limits. -mike [/QUOTE]
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