You need climbing rope and carabiners? Dang, I was looking at my keychain and clothesline an hoping to get in the trees today.
But seriously, I'm not that oblivious. This is just how I approach things. I can't just think between the lines. I have to explore all kinds of different possibilities. Often times that only leads me back to the “proper” way to do things, albeit with a lot of insight into why that way makes sense. However a lot of times I do find cracks in the system, little ways to do things differently.
For the record, I appreciate what has been done here. I'm sure this has helped many people get into the activity safely. I just can't use the "spend money and follow the directions" learning system. It doesn't work for me. Though I do hope to actually become a financially supporting member, provided that I can find a place here. I'll probably buy the DVD to at the very least understand the kind of techniques most people use. I continue to learn though other resources and videos, but in order to communicate here I need to know your language and methods.
To answer some of the questions, I want two lanyards because I want to climb branch to branch as much as possible and want to make sure I am always attached to something. Give me a basic harness and two lanyards and I can play around in some nicely structured “climbing trees” while I figure out what else I need. Plus I want to play with a lanyard and try things like ascending one from a hanging position after a fall, or securing myself in different ways. So that means one lanyard to actually protect me and another to experiment with.
I bought a descender because it is the one thing I know how to use. I've actually repelled a little bit before, though it was probably on junk rope, with people that learned from some guy, that learned from some guy, before the internet where you could actually look things up. You just had to inspect the rope, study the way it fed, and make a decision on whether it seemed safe enough.
I'm still not sure how much I’ll actually use the descender at high heights. I have to play with it and find ways to make it safe. For $10 it may just be a little toy to play with sometimes. A fun toy though.
The thing is, everything I climb with I will have to play with in order to understanding how it works and why I feel like I can trust it. For example, I looked as some different “Rads” systems people use. They confused me. I didn't understand all the rope routing and hardware. I would probably get hurt using something like that. I want to start with the simplest set ups possible because they leave less room for mistakes. Go up rope as simply as possible, go down rope as simply as possible. I'll start from there.
I'm going to start off quite low as well. I have a nice maple climbing tree in my yard that I want to set up as a training tree. Every technique and piece of equipment I plan to use at altitude will first be tested at low height. Lots and lots of playing around and trying things. Since I’m climbing for fun and don’t need to go high immediately I can do all kinds of stuff in the first few levels of branches, a whole jungle gym and climbing laboratory at my disposal. I can even stay tied off with one of my lanyards as I try out new tactics. Only after I really get a feel for the methods and equipment I’m using would I dare rely on them in more dangerous situations or forgo secondary fall protection.
Also note the difference in what we imagine. It seems like you folks are picturing expeditions to the highest peaks, while I'm imagining starting with something more like a small ropes course to test skills and techniques. Different ideas, and very different ways to approach recreational tree climbing.
My point is that I might be more ready for this than can be realized from my posts. A lot of this is just me trying to figure things out. I will not trust a method until I have practiced it and am sure that it is safe.
If you have any specific advice or thoughts I’d really like to hear them. It can't be, “Follow the directions,” but on any specific idea I’d gladly hear opinions. I need to hear advice. I'm pretty good and figuring things out, but that one detail I miss could end up causing problems.
For example take these saddles. Aside from the side rings and the comfort, what makes them so special? They seem to cost a lot more than a rock harness which people do repel from and can safely handle falls. I can't understand why I have to buy a saddle at $150 or more. Maybe there is a good reason, but to me it just feels like the nice, comfy saddle might be an arborist thing.
Why can't you use a rock harness in a tree?
Let's start with that while I wait for this DVD to arrive. Once I see the techniques folks here started with I’ll be able to ask better questions and explain any variants I'm exploring.