- Location
- Sonoma county
No this is the owner of the company. My line had 3 nicks in it and was cut into 3 ropes upon inspection yesterday morning , no climbing fo me. Ok I will def get a longer stick then, and either get a trigger or mod one like you suggest. But my biggest unknown is navigation of 60-80ft of shades out deadwood with a line. Period . Also the redwoods don’t seem as secure as a pine or doug fur they pop out easy , I wouldnt trust very many single redwood branches (unless the were substantial or very obviously attached strong. These 2/3rd gen seem to have small , spindlely , and weakly attached branches.Love it, is that you up on the trunk? These trees are absolutely doable for line setting, the most challenging for sure. When you get new tubing on your big shot try shooting with a 10 or 12' pole, use a full 8' pole (no sections) then put a 4 section on top. You can set up a "pull and hold" with a Klemheist hitch tied with accessory cord on the lower pole, tie a strong non-locking biner to the hold down, put a quick release on the loop of your slingshot pouch. Wichard snap release is the rock on, rock solid snap release despite everyone wanting to cheap out on shitty dog snaps from the hardware store etc. The Wichard snap release is a lifetime tool, will never fail or piss you off. I put a small/strong pear shaped quick link on the bottom eye of the Wichard snap release. Slide the hold down up the 8' section, pull the tubing down grabbing tubing just above the pouch, clip the pear link on the sanp into the Klemheist/carabiner hold down. Pull down and keep going push it down, you can go 6x the slack length of latex tubing. Get comfortable, sight up the pole, keep you upper hand on the back of the pole unless you like getting your knuckles smacked and fire accurately exactly where you want th bag to go. On a good day you can get accuracy within a 1 and 1/2 to 2' circle at 100+ feet with a small amount of practice. Air temperature effects latex tubing performance, above 50f all good, below 30f you need to prewarm in your truck cab to get the high shot, and be quick about it, I wrap the sling head in a hoodie or whatever and don't take it off the sling head until I'm about to fire.
All of you might already know all that, spelling it out to be clear because each detail makes a difference getting an accurate high shot. Using a pull and hold w/snap release improves your accuracy exponentially on a max 6x sling pull, I don't care how much of a rock star you are ;-)
I take the stock tubing off a big shot, use a slightly lighter tubing spec and tune the slack tube length so I can put it to the very bottom of a ten foot pole close enough to 6x length tubing extension ratio. If anyone's interested I'll post the tubing spec.
In this video one shot into a 145' woods white pine with an extensive deadwood zone guarding the first live limbs. You can see the quality of the anchor when I get to it. Doesn't always go that well, (you can hear the hit on a limb, got the good deflection that time) but you can get it in no more than 3 throws most of the time. Feel free to laugh at my ascent system, video is dated on Vimeo 2013 but was shot earlier before I was climbing rop wrench. Microcender with short tether and long foot loop, and hitch below it is the ascent system. Used a bungee HUT to move the Microcender up as I climbed. Same climbing system/slingshot setup was used to access and climb off the grid big PNW old-growth 2010, worked great.
-AJ
I would say if I could come up with a way to cinch the trunk (and fast )somehow, I’d be golden .












