It is not the tools that make a good climber. Trees, and the work needed to accomplish a task within them, are incredibly diverse. Using the best tool or technique to accomplish a task should not be influenced by generalizations that cast doubt on one's abilities.
I have used this type of pole on occasions that made it the best choice.
Get to those hard-to-reach areas with this wide selection of fiberglass telescoping poles, accessories, fish stix and push pull rods!
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I LOVE YOU! ROTFLMAO!!!!! That looks like a GREAT one. Really cool find, thanks so much!!! Rigid hooks, & choices for hook design - very important. I think I'm gonna go w/the GRAB IT hook. The reach tool i had before this one had a 'bendy' wire hook that would straighten and let go when I was pulling the lanyard or rope towards me - SO frustrating. And the telescopic links eventually just failed and it came apart. And CUT me too. What a POS that thing was. As if there isn't enuf blood in tree work without your reachy tool weighing in.
And for those of you who don't one of these things... God bless ya. Don't know how U do it. There's NO WAY in the world I'd be able to climb to the places where I need to cut, without it. Just yesterday I had to take a dead ash limb away that was over a house, and power & comm lines. But not very high above those lines. It measured maybe 30' from the trunk. Without Christina Reachy, there's no way IN HELL I woulda been able to retrieve my lanyard toss to pull myself out there and set the tag and lowering lines, and make the cuts. Just no way. I mean, I guess there's always multiple ways of doing things.
I remember back in 2009 I entered a ISA climbing competition here in PA. I was the only 'part time' climber, who didn't work for a tree service. I did OK in some areas, not so hot in others. But the speed at which you young, tall guys can footlock up a rope ASTONISHED me. One guy made it up to that... that thing Ur supposed to make it up to LOL... in like, 20 seconds or something ridiculous. Like 50' up a rope in a few seconds. I was slack jawed. So no, I don't ever wanna work anywhere near some dude like Chisolm, cause it'll be like... I never wanna go up a tree again. Ha. I'm by no means a fast tree worker, which is why I charge a very reasonable hourly rate, so I'm under no pressure to take crazy risks or go too far outside my comfort zone. Which, by the very nature of the work, I do sometimes have to push. A little. It's just the way it is.
I need up to three TIP's to work. One high above, one is my 18' positioning lanyard, and the other, a 7' mini lanyard. I toss my lanyard, flip slack into the line so my steel lobster falls thru, then retrieve w/Christina. Pull myself into a balanced position. (Ha, if I'm lucky LOL) Then I may have to connect the mini lanyard to hold my position if I'm so far out that I can't hold it on my own. Then toss the positioner again, slack the claw down, hook it, and pull myself farther out. I simply could not get to some of those crazy places clients want me to prune without both lanyards, and Christina Reachy. Gaffs help of course but I can't always use them.
And I take some ribbing on the forum for my lobster claws. I use 'em on my climbing line and my positioner. I count on the weight of steel to come down to me thru a crotch when I'm leapfrogging around. And you all do this, so you know, trees can be GRABBY sombitches. Even w/a brand new Yale 16 strand line, sometimes I gotta FLIP FLIP FLIP slack waves like a fool B 4 I get that end to come back to me, if the bark is grabby or the crotch is narrow. If it wasn't steel, I wouldn't be able to throw it as far, or coerce it back. And it wouldn't take the abuse of being repeatedly SLAMMED into hardwood.
And I'm so in love w/the DMM carabiners on my positioning lanyards. I only have two. They're old, and they are SINGLE locking, which, when Ur twisted up like a pretzel and have no room to move, hanging on with all U got to not swing like a wrecking ball, and can't see a damn thing cause there's leaves and branches everywhere, are worth their weight in gold for ease of operation.
Fudda mini lanyard, I got a DMM Perfect O on one side, and a steel non-locking w/captive bar on the other. (The captive bars pic shows two DMM's but i switched to a Kong steel captive non-locking on one end). On the DMM I tool-tightened the screwlock OPEN. Once again, when I'm holding on with all my might, trying to set (or release) a carabiner while in a tight, uncomfortable mess of a situation... it would be damn near impossible for me to operate an autoblock carabiner in those situations.