- Location
- Palos Heights
Thanks for the repliesOr actually I think it was an aerial rescue of Stanonik’s.
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Thanks for the repliesOr actually I think it was an aerial rescue of Stanonik’s.
Acsenders were being offered by Tom Ness in at least 1994 New Tribe Catalog.
And a "mini-rack" w/ change-over for decent.
Nope. I had an inch or inch and a quarter manilla rope; a lineman's belt and lanyard. I was expected to climb the one leg of rope, not connected to it at all, and then lanyard myself to a limb when I got up there. No hardware, no hitch cord. I worked that way for two summers before I learned about hitch cords that could connected you to the rope you were climbing in a DDRT method. No one on my crew dreamed that being connected to your climb line was going to catch on.
Holy fuck that's hardballNope. I had an inch or inch and a quarter manilla rope; a lineman's belt and lanyard. I was expected to climb the one leg of rope, not connected to it at all, and then lanyard myself to a limb when I got up there. No hardware, no hitch cord. I worked that way for two summers before I learned about hitch cords that could connected you to the rope you were climbing in a DDRT method. No one on my crew dreamed that being connected to your climb line was going to catch on.
Nope. No connection. Just a single leg of rope and foot locking and hand over hand. If you slipped, you fell. In those two years I don't recall anyone falling. Maybe we were a tougher breed back then. I can still climb a tree that way, although I don't want to.If I understand him correctly Tom, he is talking about the hardest way to climb SRT, which I have done to determine if such a method was physically possible. Footlocking a single fixed rope with a prusik/split tail, you have to get back on the rope with your feet to unload the hitch and release it. I actually used a second long prusik to wrap my foot and make a foot ascender. With two prusiks, the system is slow, but workable. I got my first job climbing after showing an old climber that idea.
With a fat rope it is not as bad as it sounds. I couldn't do it with the ropes we use these days.Holy fuck that's hardball
Good point. The difference between 11mm and 12.5mm is astonishing. 30mm does sound easier to hold onto.With a fat rope it is not as bad as it sounds. I couldn't do it with the ropes we use these days.
Wow...what years are you talking about.WHere was this?No one on my crew dreamed that being connected to your climb line was going to catch on.
Nobody cared what or how you were operating as long as you got it done.
Multicenders opened up a whole new world compared to the SRS techniques that we were using to climb big trees in the 1970's. But I am still teaching beginning climbers how to climb with a handled ascender and changeover to descent on a D4 or RIG in big conifers because it is the method that is least prone to complications when climbing really big trees. Many of the mechanicals do not behave well on small diameter (10-11.5 mm) SRS ropes, and for that reason I think some of them are just not very good tools for beginners when they are 250' up on a really long descent. I am not bad-mouthing mechanicals, because I love them for many applications, I just think people need to realize there are some applications where the old-school methods are still useful and safe.Acsenders were being offered by Tom Ness in at least 1994 New Tribe Catalog.
And a "mini-rack" w/ change-over for decent.
Not quite sure what you mean by having all your weight on one leg with a basal anchor.I just rope walked yesterday for the first time. Yay for me. But curious on your opinions….
Does anyone else get freaked out having all your weight on one leg with a basal anchor?
I haven’t started climbing around srt yet, but I’m wondering if anyone prefers going up traditional foot locking and srt down?