Hoping to be there but on the injured reserve list. I managed a "Near complete tear" of my right hamstring and won't be able to see a Dr. until the week after the event. I'm not going to risk any further damage. I really do want to be there though.
I agree with the comments regarding Elm trees. The tight crotches and stuck ropes are a bitch. Sycamore and London Plane leaf dust is worst in the spring when the leaves are young. I have also been affected in winter when the seed balls break apart as well. My daughter has about 60 London Plane...
I'll second the Marlow Vega and xstatic is a close second. I'm not fond of the RRP so I have returned to the OG Rope Runner. I also use the Sticth hitch and Matt Cornell hitch on both ropes with good results.
We have about 140 employees in the division. Needs a good leader. I don't have that special piece of paper so they wont even consider me, even though I am filling half the requirements of the position. I don't want to have to deal with employee issues anyway.
My wife has recently gotten into quilting and has just completed her first quilt and is beginning a table runner for our daughter for Christmas. I tried to convince her to do yours Tom, but the knit of T-shirts makes the cutting difficult.
That is the dilemma in this city. We are the second largest city in Georgia yet have no tree services that do any kind of PHC and few who do reasonable preservation work. So the question you ask has never come up. Hopefully some day it will and at that point we will have to adjust the field...
Original post specified "new climber". My first formal training was the Arboriculture class in the Horticultural short course at Penn State. Our first lab was spent inside learning knots. We had 12 knots to learn. You could not climb until you could t-d-s all of them correctly the first try...
In a classroom learning to tie knots. When I start to teach someone to climb, the first thing I teach is knots, About 12-15 of them. homework is to tie, dress and set each one 100 times in a row. Most students never do the homework. The City I work for requires testing before one can start a...
Speaking of the mold spore cloud, I have had several instances where dusty spore filled wood caused me grief. Just this past September I spent about a month hacking my head off with no other symptoms after an afternoon of dusty chipping.
Glad you have gotten the anchor chain off your neck Steve. Sounds like life is taking a good turn for you. We are not getting old, we are getting seasoned. Hope to see you at Geezers. OOM.
I know you are limiting your study to the Ashville area but you may want to consider one thta is in my neighborhood of middle Georgia. We have a City owned Willow Oak that is 84" DBH that a third of the canopy was destroyed by straight line winds in spring of 2016. It is retrenching beautifully...