treeclimber165
Member A.K.A Skwerl
Thought I'd try to discuss something worthwhile here. Since switching over from a tautline hitch to an advanced split tail about 6 months ago, a whole new world of climbing has been opened for me. Who would have thought that after 12+ years climbing, I could increase my speed in a tree by 50% in a few short months.
The single biggest advance for me (besides a Distel hitch) has been my Pantin ankle ascender. I seem to be losing some upper body strength especially in my right arm due to nagging residue from my fall 2½ years ago, but I can now 'footlock' up into a tree faster than ever before.
After reading a LOT of info on SRT and spending weeks mulling it over in my mind, I finally tried it one day in my back yard a few months ago. I bought 2-3 different ascenders and tried to find what worked best for ME. What I've come up with and used extensively in the 100'+ Willow Oaks in NC this month is the following:
One left hand Petzl handled ascender with a 30" Loop Runner and Am'D biner.
One Petzl Pantin ankle ascender.
My friction hitch on a Williams biner.
I set my rope, tie a running boline and send it up to choke the limb. I tie in on the single line just as I would on a doubled line. Then I clip the handled ascender to the top of my friction hitch biner, so when advanced it will pull my friction hitch along. I use a 'stand/sit' method between the Pantin and handled ascender. I can cross my feet so I'm using both legs to advance, and I can also grab the handled ascender with both hands if necessary (but my right arm is weak).
Once at the top, I only need to tie a biner on the end of my rope and clip in. My friction hitch is already tied, I can store the handled ascender on my belt and the Pantin stays on my foot. This has been the easiest and fastest way I've found so far without having too much extra gear to deal with once aloft. The guys I'm climbing for are used to climbers who trim with gaffs, so I need to be faster than a gaffed climber without slowing down the job messing around with extra gear. So far they are very pleased with my speed and I'm not being told to 'just gaff it and get it done'.
Here is a pic of my ascender setup. Sorry it's kinda dark but I don't have the software to lighten it up.
The single biggest advance for me (besides a Distel hitch) has been my Pantin ankle ascender. I seem to be losing some upper body strength especially in my right arm due to nagging residue from my fall 2½ years ago, but I can now 'footlock' up into a tree faster than ever before.
After reading a LOT of info on SRT and spending weeks mulling it over in my mind, I finally tried it one day in my back yard a few months ago. I bought 2-3 different ascenders and tried to find what worked best for ME. What I've come up with and used extensively in the 100'+ Willow Oaks in NC this month is the following:
One left hand Petzl handled ascender with a 30" Loop Runner and Am'D biner.
One Petzl Pantin ankle ascender.
My friction hitch on a Williams biner.
I set my rope, tie a running boline and send it up to choke the limb. I tie in on the single line just as I would on a doubled line. Then I clip the handled ascender to the top of my friction hitch biner, so when advanced it will pull my friction hitch along. I use a 'stand/sit' method between the Pantin and handled ascender. I can cross my feet so I'm using both legs to advance, and I can also grab the handled ascender with both hands if necessary (but my right arm is weak).
Once at the top, I only need to tie a biner on the end of my rope and clip in. My friction hitch is already tied, I can store the handled ascender on my belt and the Pantin stays on my foot. This has been the easiest and fastest way I've found so far without having too much extra gear to deal with once aloft. The guys I'm climbing for are used to climbers who trim with gaffs, so I need to be faster than a gaffed climber without slowing down the job messing around with extra gear. So far they are very pleased with my speed and I'm not being told to 'just gaff it and get it done'.
Here is a pic of my ascender setup. Sorry it's kinda dark but I don't have the software to lighten it up.