Probably TLTR.... I did a cat rescue last weekend....winds were up to 35mph per weather folks. Arrived on site and cat was at about 30 feet in a sweetgum, halfway up tree. First shot with APTA and cat zipped up to tip-top, about 60 feet, real skinny top. I climbed up to about 40 feet at point where the main trunk split into two leads...any higher and I felt the top might break out with me in it...sail effect from the wind was significant. The left lead was towards house, the two leads were about 20 feet long. Cat would not come back down. I cut the left lead and dumped it toward house..wind was blowing that way so that one was easy.
I had already told the HO that if things got bad I might have to cut the tree down with the cat in it...never have done that before. This was a feral cat, just outside their window and had been caterwauling for 5 days and they wanted it down. They asked me what to do with the cat if I got it down (cat judge again!!) I said, "I don't know...if I am lucky it will climb another tree and you can pay me again to get it down again"...she laughed and said, "only one rescue today".
Now I had the cat confined to the one tall lead...there was a dense canopy under the tree and out to 15 foot radius about 10 feet over the ground. I shook the top a lot to get the cat to either climb down to me or to jump into the canopy...no go. Wind was constant most of the time, sometimes gusted pretty hard...against the lay of the top. I finally decided to dump the top...sun was getting close to horizon, temp was in 40's and dropping. I put a rope on the top, set up a pulley to capture the belay rope...planned to use natural crotch friction to control the top but couldn't be sure the rope would actually lay in the crotch when I cut the top. The pulley was insurance if the crotch didn't capture the belay rope.
No face cut, I wanted the top to slowly tip over..I cut from the back and towards the wind...the lay of the top. Bad thing was that the wind would blow and pinch the saw (Silky) then die down and I would cut some more. My worry was the wind would gust at the wrong time and send the top the wrong way (towards me) or into a nearby BIG poplar...and the cat might transfer to that tree.
Wind cooperated...the top started easing over from my back cut. I sheathed the Silky, manned the belay rope and watched cat and top go flying down...did a dynamic belay and top came to rest above the canopy. I asked if the cat was still in the top...HO shouted, "yes, but it is climbing back up the top towards you!" Nope, not going to happen. I dumped the top, it crashed onto the canopy, the cat dove onto the canopy and hit the ground running...headed toward California last I saw of it...keep you eyes open, Stephen!
Final bill to her was $310 ($250 rescue, $60 travel)...she made check for $400.
Two hours work, not bad.
And I got to dump a top with a cat in it...and got paid to do that!!