also posted over at TreeBuzz by myself.
Lets stop for a minute and examine our gear (recreational only): 1/2" to 9/16" climbing ropes, strong enough to lift a truck, steel carabiners with breaking strengths exceeding 50,000lbs, huge false crotch pulleys, hefty slings that a crane could use for lifting tanks, thick 2mm throwlines and bulky lead weights, massive slingshots, and all the other associated gear for recreational tree climbing........it all adds up to lots of weight to carry around, which makes the climber fatigued....even before they start climbing. And lets not forget about the climbing ropes......do we REALLY NEED ropes that have a MINIMUM breaking strength of 5000+ lbs? Do we really need lanyards and friction savers made from webbing that is strong enough to tow a 15ton truck. Do we really need that big steel carabiner? the same one that military helicopters use to hold a 50,000lb load under the belly of the 'copter? in short, do we really need to lug around all this weight?
I for one am tired, tired of hauling a 50lb pack whenever i want to go treeclimbing on the weekends. Rope, slings, biners, harness, gloves, helmet, throwlines, throwweights, buckets and bags for everything, water, food, rain gear, first aid kit, etc etc etc. My shoulders are hurting, i'm getting tired and i have'nt even started climbing yet!!!! and i'm very physically fit! :crazy:
So I propose a radical paradigm shift in this matter, a shift towards thinner ropes, smaller slings, lighter biners, etc.
"oh but the safety factor" the gallery cries! "tradition" they cry, "you can't do that! they murmur, "who does he think he is?" they whisper.
well, I'll tell you who i am: i'm a person that is never satisfied with anything, i need to tweak and fiddle and remake and experiment with things, to suit MY NEEDS.
so here goes:
Climbing rope:
Black Widow Micro Bull line.
Yes thats right, a bull line for climbing. It is 1/4" thick, (and yet it STILL exceeds 6000lbs min breaking strength, so all the safety naysayers should be happy), it packs into a tiny rope bag, almost 75% SMALLER than a same length climbing line. Its insanely lightwieght for its strength rating...so already we have dropped weight in our kit. Its tough, abrasion resistant, and you know what? works just fine for a climbing line.
Throwlines.
Berkley FIRELINE. 100lb test, 1/2 MM thick (YES a half mm thick!) slick as can be, tough as cable and VERY abrasion resistant, even over dirt and stones. Deploys easily, stores easily, and unlike regular throwlines, can be spooled up every time for storage. will pull a rope up into a tree lickety split and with ease.
Throwweights:
a 3/4 oz lead weight, tied to the above mentioned FIRELINE, can be shot upwards of 400 feet with a small handheld slingshot. No need for 1 lb (16oz) throwbags anymore. (seriously, ONE POUND throwbags??? :crazy: )
Slingshot:
a small cheap handheld slingshot, that weighs about 3 oz, replaces a 30lb bigshot or whathaveyou.
Friction Savers:
thin strong 1/2" wide Dyneema or Spectra webbing. With smaller 1" steel ring on one side, and a 1.5" steel ring on the other. OR a SMALLER leather tube (thinner climbing line remember?)
Carabiners:
ditch that 1 lb steel locking biner and get a ultralight locking aluminum biner. Weighs 2oz. (and to think i used to carry over 10 lbs of biners in my kit.
Pulleys:
go small and go light. Micro pulleys rock. Think GRAMS vs POUNDS....we dont need big steel false crotch pulleys...!
packs and storage bags:
toss that heavy cordura.....lots of strong ultralight nylon and other material packs out there that weigh less than a 1/4 LB (thats even less than most throwweights...!)
so there you have it. A very massive weight REDUCTION, with no loss in the safety factor. Everything packs into a smaller pack, its lighter to carry, less fatiguing, which makes for a better easier day of climbing. I think that with a downsizing in gear size (for recreational climbing ONLY) will produce a new breed of extreme, fast climbers.
HOW LIGHT CAN WE GO, while retaining a healthy safety factor? < I issue this challenge to all: input your ideas, tests, etc. Lets find materials and new fibers, new technology etc, that can be used for going ultralight, while retaining that all important safety factor.
I have already started, i have gone to some extremes already that would make some of you freak out and cringe :smile: but i trust my life in those decisions and picks of gear. I have never been a follower, i have always been a leader and a innovator. I'm already climbing a mixed hybrid style of DRT & SRT combined.
THINK OUTSIDE OF THE BOX!!!! (or in this case the tree)
:cool: