What is there to be proud of about spurless climbing? Try me, maybe I'll understand, sounds to me like "why use a boom truck when you could climb, and why use spurs when you could hump up a rope like a freak?" Is it really something to be proud of? Its kind of like the homos having "gay pride" parades, go ahead and be gay, ain't nothing to be proud of.rebelman said:Clearance I wouldn't expect you to understand. That's reserved for the spurless climbers.
BigJohn said:You might as well go bashing the guy who serves you at McDonalds for not wanting to further himself.
Good one dude, Rebelman, I know that spurs are not good, I don't care, I also don't leave stubs, as far as my predudices, I tells it like I sees it, I do not think it is healthy to hold it all in. Not out to start ethnic cleansing the homos, tree huggers etc., they have a right to be here like I do and also to say what they want, like me, and they have no problem with saying thier thing. I like some trees a lot, keep it in perspective, trees are just trees, no big deal.userdude said:If that guys at McD's knows all aspect of the business, from mopping to running the register, then he's good to go in my book.
TreeCo: Those smilies are about as gay as your avatar.
userdude said:I've been working with about 8 different bucket babies lately
second to thatJohn464 said:I dont know the term "bomb itself" , but on a dead hollow tree id rather be in the bucket.
moose you dragged buckets too definate good timeskmoose said:As far as utility work goes, it is a matter of production and safety. I don't care if you are a 9 foot tall, 3 armed chimp with a squirrel tail, good bucket guys will out cut climbers 2 if not 3 to one. Not just trimming twigs either, heavy overhang, 30"+ removals, you name it. If they can drag a bucket truck to it, it's down faster than 3 groundmen can chip or stack.
I give anyone their props for being good climbers. Climbing, rigging, and cutting aloft is an art and if time and hazzards permit, a good pecentage of the overhead cost their climbing eliminates should be awarded to them and there support crew. Still, after either is set up, the bucket will reach the top long before the climber........Buckets don't need a break and they don't get tired.
Now, if the groundmen where looking up when they heard a saw running like they are supposed to.........They wouldn't have to worry about being bombed. Man I can hear the crap storm comming on this one.
It's not the employer's fault that you don't have a CDL. If you can't legally transport the truck to the job, then how can you call the employer 'cheap'? Go get your CDL. It isn't your employer's responsibility or fault that you aren't properly licensed.Climb020 said:It is cheaper for a company to put who ever he has in the bucket to get the job done then let a $100,000 piece of equipment sit in the shop. So it is the employers fault for being too damn cheap to get proper help and just send a rookie up in the bucket cause he has a CDL.
This has happened to me where a rookie started with a CDL took over the bucket, made more then I did cause he had a CDL and I can climb and prune the tree faster then he could with the bucket 60% of the time or more.
tshanefreeman said:Wow..........this thread is really based on a one-sided, extremely biased stereotype.
...All climbers are more educated and ambitious...
...All bucket operators are ignorant and lazy...
...All girls are weak...
...All boys are strong...
Seriously. Wow!
If the bucket operators that you are referring too are the way that you say, their problem is more due to their boss or company. If they have little education, experience, or ambition, why is their employer keeping them around.
I know that you have tried to re-word your initial thread by saying that their are some operators that are educated and ambitious, but didn't you honestly think that you were going to get jumped on by people.
I initially took offense to your stereotype. Here's why: I'm a business owner. A climber. A bucket operator. A stump grinder. A groundie. A chemical applicator. An ISA certified arborist. A university graduate. A college graduate. I'm not saying that I'm the next Nobel Prize Winner, heck, I don't even want a pat on the back, but I'm certainly not deserving of your stereotype and neither are the countless men and women that strive to better this industry in their own ways. I'm sure that for the eight people that you are referring too, there are probably thousands that would put your theory to shame.
A bucket truck is nothing more than a tool that has been created to make the lives of business owners and employees much more efficient and effective. I wouldn't say that it makes people lazy. People make themselves lazy. If anything, these tools increase productivity. If a company can better both their gross and net income, why not utilize one or two or three of these machines. Perhaps you should start a thread saying that people that use chippers are lazy and uneducation. That the smart and ambitious people load all their branches manually into half-ton trucks. If the people operating the equipment don't want to learn and don't want to work, chances are that they won't have their job for long. At least they wouldn't if I was signing their cheques!
Really....Wow....