Grew up on a farm.
Older brother Mark showed me how to use a chainsaw when i was around 12 or 13.
Split wood and wheelbarrowed it to the house for years, house heated with woodstoves.
Worked on farms picking melons and corn in summer, pumkins in winter. Worked at sawmill when 16 and other small jobs like spraying skeeters for Dept of Agriculture.
When 15 I started helping older brother Mark with tree work. He had a old drum style chipper that would whip you "to make you tough" and a pickup or two.
Around 16 or 17 started helping him every summer while in school and college. And even helped on weekends or after school somedays. Boy we worked hard. His business grew and he got nicer equipment. Man, I thought that new Bandit 200+ was heaven! and it was at that time.
Graduated high school and off to college (I always hated school by the way, ever since elementary school, thought it would never end)
First year of college I thought I was sick of tree work, so I took up criminal justice. Did good in first year, but after that break from tree work, I thought, "what I'm I doing, I know a lot about this tree work, and I DO like it, so I should continue".
Oh, and I was climbing some, but Mark liked to work really fast and it would take too long to have me do stuff when he could just do it himself faster.
As a groundman, I always liked the image the climber had. The customers and public would watch them in awe. And climbing to me, seemed much easier than ground work, not to mention much more fun. I knew I had to climb full time someday.
I wrote to the Society of Aboriculture asking them what college I could go to to learn more about trees. I thought that I may go into business with my brother Mark or maybe on my own. At that time, I wanted to go into business with him.
They wrote back and told me about a 2 yr. tech program at Allegany College of Maryland. A Forest Technology AA degree. So that's what I did cause I wanted a little more background to give me some advantage. I did not want it for my resume, I was working for Mark or myself. Good program, learned a lot. Not many of the students pass the courses.
The college was in Western MD. My home in North East MD (3hrs away). Met a girl while at college in W. MD, which kept me in that economically dead area /forum/images/graemlins/crazy.gif. Bought a run down house out there.
Hired by a tree service out there when I graduated. For either $6 or $8 an hour (forget, but not more than eight though), as a CLIMBER and using all my OWN gear and MY saw (011,cheap). I was supposed to be the secondary climber learning. I noticed that my little experience climbing was as good if not better than the full time climber and I ended up doing the trees he was worried about.
I was used to working fast and hard. I remember the other crew members asking me to slow down and take breaks with them, I hated that. That's not how I was taught to work.
After 2 or 3 weeks (after the boss saw what I could do) I asked him to give me a raise to at least $10.00. He wouldn't do it, so I quit.
I started doing odd jobs like fence building and tree removals (which paid much more than that 8.00/hr) and I got my Maryland Tree Expert License (you can't call yourself an expert or trim any trees in Maryland unless you pass this test and have insurance, my past working experience and college qualified me to take the test). After getting that License I created Arbor Experts Tree Service (Arbor-X). At 22 years old.
I worked out there for 7 years. Established a great client base, which was hard cause money is very tight and the competition feirce. Things were going pretty well and I was just ready to start a second crew the following spring.....
Then, relationship didn't work out with that girl, now wife. Seperation and divorce (but very civil luckily, no horror story).
Packed up and moved back to my home town. /forum/images/graemlins/smile.gif Lots of friends and big family there. Man I missed it! Sold some equipment and went to being small again. Started over building up the Arbor-X name. I knew it would grow much faster here. I just now completed my second year in my home town area. Things are starting to roll again, building up bigger and better equipment and training key men for the future.
I'm still the main climber, mechanic, secretary, boss, spray tech, estimater, advertiser, purchaser and promoter.
It's a lot of work and I love it. But I do want to have key employees take over some of my responsibilities in the future, so maybe some day, I can have a life outside of the business.
-jeeze that was freakin' long, I'd skip over that one when I saw the size of it!
later,