allmark
Participating member
Wow just catching up on the buz and I see this. Glad you are healing. A positive mental strength is as important as physical for healing.. Luckily you have both so no doubts you will continue on a great path.
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if it was easy everybody would be doing it.This is why I get frustrated with people with a stihl 025 and a truck and say this job is easy
For discussion's sake let's put the climber/Rachel in a DdRT system. Now run the scenario. What sort of rescue or escape would be available? I would always like to have the option of a ground lower available to me or my co-workers. Not having one always felt like walking into a dead-end alley...trapped.
Another worry with the basal anchor system is the anchor line being hidden and taught on the opposite side of the tree. A thread came up recently where someone was cutting near vines I think, and cut through their anchor line. Thankfully they were lanyarded in. It's a very real possibility though, and even with a handsaw.Tom, I think I'd have the same trapped feeling vice versa; if i had to rely on others for lowering. As far as burning goes, a 2-over-3 prussik friction hitch (a knot-which-shall-not-be-named) has room for the whole hand on a fast descent, as I've been glad to employ many times.
As for a long-fall survivors get-together, I'm multipley (sp?) qualified to join, but the memories aren't so sweet, and my memory's nowhere near as keen as Rachel's!
All that for the cause of deadwooding for aesthetics: too bad that arborists don't have more say in prioritizing the work!
Hi Rachel,
I'm so happy to read that you are on the road to recovery. I did not notice you describe here what your rescuer had to work with at the base of the tree. What had you tied there?
I'm still trying to figure out how you fell. Did he unload your rope before cutting it? Was the rescue line still attached or was it the TIP that broke out and led to the fall? Its really a matter of understanding where things went south and not an allocation of blame.
Thanks for the response. In analyzing the accident the hardest thing to get past is the idea that your searching for a clear understanding of its real cause and not seeking to blame. Trying to piece together the evidence is the only way you'll be able to find those lessons inherent in this accident to help develop your crews abilities and understanding. It's about gaining valuable insight to improve your performance as a team.Honestly, I'm just as confused about where the failure was? All I know is in that last second I looked up as I free fell and watched the climbing line go slack and begin to pile up, spilling out of the tree. He said that he provided slack and the rope ran a few feet before looking over and seeing me in the ground. I wasn't lowered on my leg of the rope, I was on the rope and then was free falling. While we waited for the ambulance I stared at the tree and there was no rope in it? That was all I could focus on once realizing how much pain I was in. I've been told that the rescue line didn't separate from my line? They also said that they saw a rip in the upper canopy, but there were many other sizable branches directly underneath my tie-in because it was a fir. Those branches would have caught me? I believe that the hitch connected with one of the many branches in the tree and dropped me. I can't remember the route of the load bearing leg of the SRT line but it surely couldn't have been a clear route.
I respect and care about the guys I work with, I don't want to blame or place fault towards anyone. I know he was scared and was trying to help me. I just want our crew to be given time to practice aerial rescue so this never happens again. This experience has definitely changed my perspective on SRT systems as well.
...The Wrench and Hitch were both sharing the load but I failed to provide the necessary distance between them to work them both. So in my initial descent I had to step up take the weight of the Wrench, place the load fully on the hitch and then break the hitch and then re-position the Wrench. It was very rough, awkward, and rushed. I stopped when the heat on the rope became to much, unfortunately in a spot I stopped, there was no where to stand to do this again...