They suck. Hey Josh, how much do you pay to dump palm? Here it is alot.
Jeff
Jeff
jeff, we pay something like $65 a palm base price for pruning. the scale house at our green waste charges like $50 per 1000lbs. a single coconut palm with 6 months of growth can have 300-500 pounds of green waste. so we often pay $150 for the whole truck load.
come on down brah. we got some 100+ foot eucalyptus trees to climb and hang out in. BYOTB bring your own tree boat.
They suck. Hey Josh, how much do you pay to dump palm? Here it is alot.
Jeff
I know nothing about palms or palm climbing
Check this out...old school vs new school...
I like to put my wire core around the trunk, then a lanyard up through the fronds on my bridge so I can sit...then choke my climb line (or adjustable friction saver) when finished and rappell down. And I had a camel back as well 'cause it was August...HOT and HUMID!
The other chap had a waist belt, a short flipline and spikes...and a ball cap.
Hey Bermie,I just noticed your new dual residency.
Are you part time she-devil now?:msp_ohmy::hmm3grin2orange:
i either hand throw or use a big shot to set my lines but only on coconut palms that have not been pruned for years. i still wear spikes to get a good foot hold once up top after the dangerous fronds have been cut off. i only SRT'd that last palm of the day cause it was dangerous and had the potential for fronds collapsing.
It is impossible to set a climbing line in a coconut palm by using a throw ball and pulling the climbing line through it, and I will bet you any amount of money you want that you can't do it. I have seen many attempts and not one successful. And what "dangerous" fronds on a coconut palm are you talking about? They don't have a skirt like Washingtonias and some of the other fan palms that can slide down the trunk.
I would also like to see a 20 lb. coconut. Even an extremely large one weighs less than 15 lbs, with the average weight of a mature nut only 8-10.5 lbs. You and I both know that you did not SRT up that palm and just spiked it. No shame in that, even the local arborist association's guidelines permit spiking a coco when other means are not practical. You have been posting bs on various tree forums and pretending to be someone you are not. Just be honest and admit you know next to nothing and have very limited experience.
Don't go talking to my buddy Jeff like he never touched a palm in his life when you didn't know the size of the operation he runs and like he said, the thousands of palms they trim a year. You need to be humble and stop lying so much, unless you want me to direct others to threads in other forums where you admit that.
Disclaimer: after a careful review of my 28 years in biz, I have only trimmed coconuts between 30,000-32,000 times but still stand by what I stated above.
arborjockey,
you don't know what happened between me and Treesurfer at the time of my post, and I am not going to air it out here, especially since he has since sent me a sincere apology.
I think most of the guys here, and everyone who knows me personally, know that :
1. I don't exaggerate or bs people
2. I can back up or prove what I say.
3. I am willing to put money where my mouth is.
I have done many coco removals where it was necessary to set a line to pull it in a certain direction, 18 in one vacant lot on Kahala Ave. That is where the most expensive homesteaded on Oahu are located. All of the palms were between 60-70 ft. of trunk. To set the line, we climb about 3/4 of the way up, tie a running bowline on the trunk, and use a figure 8 to come down on that line. That takes less than 2 min. How long does it take you to put a line in the head of a coco and how tall are the cocos you are talking about? How can you be sure it won't slide off the fronds when pulling? How big is your crew to have the capabilty to trim 32,000 cocos in one week? Even if one guy can do 200 (an unrealistic nbr) a day, do you have 32 climbers??? I thought the biggest tree company in Hawaii only had about 10. That coco I trimmed on the video did not have a lot of crap left on it as you said. You cannot see the head clearly enough to make that statement. I go back there next month and I will take an overall photo, and then a close up so you can tell it is the same tree before I trim it, and you will see even 3 months later, there is not a lot of ”crap” on it. I still am willing to bet whatever amount you want, to prove my statement false, that it is impossible to pull a climbing line through the head of a coco using a throwball line.
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