Based in Wisconsin for now, looking to make a road trip and get a few days of work lined up in Washington and or Oregon the last week of May.
10 years of experience climbing, insured and professional, crane experience with both knuckleboom and cable cranes, isa certified.
Attached are a few...
Rigging out an EAB infected green ash. Used a ring spliced into some 3 strand as a drifting redirect to move pieces laterally out to the sidewalk since the yard was very congested.
I get brushed with some tips at 3:55 or so which was my fault for setting the redirect a little short. It was...
Getting a jump on this now, I've decided to hit the road contract climbing full time and skip going full tree service for now. I'll be leaving Wisconsin in February more than likely, I'll be traveling with a camper and my dog and looking to start working mainly in the south chasing good weather...
I'm 26, I will see the effects of our current emissions and I think we have an opportunity as a "green" industry to put our heads together and find ways we can contribute to fighting climate change. I tried to work off of a bicycle, the gear is too heavy to transport alone and do enough work to...
So I'm 90% contract climber at this point and have been for a little while now and looking to step into equipment next year as I'll have enough tax returns to show growth and high profitability. My question is should I go the standard route and get a chipper and chip truck or my current musing...
I recently went on my own as a full time contract climber and love it but my biggest hang up is longevity. I've climb with modern techniques, don't work very hard physically when I climb anymore and have the skill set to handle whatever is thrown at me. I'm 25 now so I figure 10 to 15 good years...
Removed a previously storm damaged limb, did some tip weight reduction over structures and dead wood. Next year she'll get some cambistat and an inspection.