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  1. TINYHULK

    The Art and Science of Practical Rigging vs. TCIA Best Practices for Rigging in Arboriculture.

    My current rigging line is 1/2 nystron with a 6in spliced eye where I run the notch backbone mini. Quick to connect a few small limbs or use it to do a girth hitch around a larger piece. I’ve had great success with it. Using it either with a notch #2 thimble or the isc mini green 1/2 block with...
  2. TINYHULK

    The Art and Science of Practical Rigging vs. TCIA Best Practices for Rigging in Arboriculture.

    ive climbed on true blue and I love the feel of it but never used it for climbing. With a MBS of 6600, that would be a 5:1 WLL of 1320 and is called a "low stretch" rope. How do you feel about rigging bigger wood with it? My current rigging set up is all 1/2in. Samson Nystron and Samson...
  3. TINYHULK

    The Art and Science of Practical Rigging vs. TCIA Best Practices for Rigging in Arboriculture.

    Oh I didn’t realize that was your video. Hope I didn’t offend in any way. Any insight you can share from the video? And I look forward to helping the guys I work with to learn from it 😁
  4. TINYHULK

    The Art and Science of Practical Rigging vs. TCIA Best Practices for Rigging in Arboriculture.

    That was a lot like the vtio vector force article. Couldn't see the ground all the way but could tell there was that gazebo and I would like to think there was something else down there that required them to rig it in the first place. Seems a little poorly thought out honestly. Could have kept a...
  5. TINYHULK

    The Art and Science of Practical Rigging vs. TCIA Best Practices for Rigging in Arboriculture.

    I have the ASPR and am a new climber 1.5 years in and the book had great foundation but just after my own common sense and research (yes some YouTube) the book left me wanting more and having many questions. Which is probably a great problem to have when learning something new. There is a very...
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