rope-a-dope
Branched out member
- Location
- Asheville
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That's pretty redundant. It relies on your kernmaster (or whatever that akimbo rope is... I had a safari that looked like that pattern with a different color), but the unions are definitely independent.Does this count?
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When we bring production into a conversation about safety then we are a part of the problem. The production argument has been used in every instance of advancing safe work practices. What that is saying is we will trade lives for a dollars. It assumes the client places no value on the life of the worker or their family. Yet, conversation I’ve had with clients, residential, commercial or government, there is never a willingness to accept an incident onsite.
We as an industry need to stop bidding on price and start selling on the true value of consistent safety, knowledge and best practices that encompass all of these elements.
When we no longer have preventable deaths and injuries then the productivity conversation can begin.
It’s the division of labor I’m talking about not competency.Last time I went to the Emerg Dept they did xrays and misread them - said I was all clear and instead had fractures and dislocations and had to call me back next day to get treated.
Time before that waited three hours for them to take splinter out of my eye - ended up pulling it out by myself with fingernails.
Not good case examples for the efficient and good treatment expected...
Nothing is a universal tool but it becomes mainstream when it leads to a competitive advantage. When you have the right tools then you work your list to take advantage of them.Understand what you are taking about. But sometimes requires a well worked team to manage jobs and keep it safe. The approach has its merits but again is it a universal solution for anyone? Case specific according to work list that day...
I think pretty much everyone appreciates drt(double rope tecnique) and enjoys the benefits of the system, some more often than others. This thread addresses weather ddrt(doubled rope technique)or mrs( moving rope system) or srt should be outlawed in the US as it has been in UK.I don’t know of anyone thats opposed to drt or efforts to steamline it. Some people are opposed to abandoning mrs or srt.Man I’m torn on the subject. I’ve used two lines in many applications in trees and it’s been very useful. I do however see how redundant it can be also. The tree gear sites are gonna looove selling double of everything used for life support too haha!
“Practice” self rescue i meant to sayI would also encourage anyone using drt to self rescue with one hand. Its very easy if circumstance is right, not so much when tails are over limbs and tangled or pinching somewhere. I had to self rescue with a broken shoulder from a bad swing, it was easy,I feel i could have done it drt also but im pretty sure it would have taken much longer and been more complicated.
Wrangler's post #304 is a great picture illustrating getting out to tippy tips, illustrative of when you're near the top of a tree or there's no longer any beefy central leader to tie in to.
short cut link to page https://www.treebuzz.com/forum/threads/uk-two-ropes-at-all-times-usa-next.41331/page-16
don't know how to re-link picture itself
I think it illustrates the upside of more than one line be it long lanyard or bonafide 2nd line in expanding access to the tree and/or upping the safety margin to allow that access that would otherwise be fool hardy on a single (isolated typically!) tip.
I talked briefly with a fellow the other day about rigging line support style placement of climb lines and he said something along the lines of "if you break out the top of the tree" implying breaking out your normal single isolated tip. I countered with you're not going to break out the whole top, only the point or region your rope contacts and that's the other core beauty of a typical NON-isolated SRT tip, spreading the load and having another catch opportunity for the rope if the first tip should fail.
A comment was made about multi ropes and a knife to cut a rope should that tip/portion of tree fail and start dragging you/your rope down. That's a fair assessment but I figure in a spindly multi leader scenario the size of piece ought to be limited and ought to get tangled or caught before it got very far. It might lock your hitch and force you to handsaw or knife cut the rope to let the tree chunk down.
Don't know if it's just me or in a removal scenario you'd never need to be out in the spindly's, you'd just stay inboard in larger wood, mooting pushing the boundaries of safe access and just using simple big margin of safety access parameters. But for pruning or obstacle avoidance I think spindly/safe access boundaries comes into play.
I'm not a fan of enforced full duplicate climb systems but agree with many here who note the comfort of security knowing your local support tip is not your eggs (life) in one basket stressor, to get right or else.
Been a while since I read the UK regs, do they say the second system has to be full direct bail out all the way to the ground capable at all times? Ie does this rule out long lanyards?
Im not sure but I would think a long lanyard would count for one system if both ends reached ground, It’s essentially a doubled rope systemThe knife comment was from someone else's earlier post in this thread. I'd figure on using a handsaw, always with me, even when I'm in rec mode. Although it might roll the rope instead of biting into it depending on how much tension was on the rope. That may be the reason for their (possible) use of a knife.
So it's twinned right to the ground, long lanyard not ok. Because even if the lanyard can get you down it can't get another climber up?