B
Blinky
Guest
It is all about the groundie because a cut's a cut. A good man with spot on judgment, a block and a GRCS or porty, can get the wood on the ground with minimum shock to the system... none at all if your rigging point is located where he can let the piece go all the way to the ground.
I have to do 13' pine logs every so often, usually in the 20-22" category... I hate it. Did a huge ash recently, some chunks were getting close to 30" in diameter and and about 8' long. I kept that big old huge tree trunk between me and the pieces..
It's still a huge point of pride for me that my 14 year son is the best groundie I've ever worked with. We've rigged some really big chunks, sometimes on marginal trees, only because I knew he would get the pieces down safely on the first swing without snatching the anchor.
I do have a story though. I subbed for an injured climber who got crushed against a trunk rigging off a piece that was longer than he was high off the ground. Apparently when the tip touched down the butt swung around an sandwiched his ass.
I have to do 13' pine logs every so often, usually in the 20-22" category... I hate it. Did a huge ash recently, some chunks were getting close to 30" in diameter and and about 8' long. I kept that big old huge tree trunk between me and the pieces..
It's still a huge point of pride for me that my 14 year son is the best groundie I've ever worked with. We've rigged some really big chunks, sometimes on marginal trees, only because I knew he would get the pieces down safely on the first swing without snatching the anchor.
I do have a story though. I subbed for an injured climber who got crushed against a trunk rigging off a piece that was longer than he was high off the ground. Apparently when the tip touched down the butt swung around an sandwiched his ass.