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Life in the trees 🌳

3 members • Free

1 contribution to Life in the trees 🌳
🌳 Climbing Wisdom: One Setup That Changed the Game
What’s one Climbing, Rigging, or Rescue Technique that you picked up that made your job 10x easier or safer? (Share your pro tips- big or small- that others can use in the canopy.) In rescue, simplicity saves lives. This 3-piece setup, I always keep on my saddle — and proven itself in training and emergencies — A Tri-Locking Carabiner, Prusik Cord, and a Pinto Pulley. This 3-piece setup, you can set up a quick haul or controlled lower when someone aloft needs medical attention. 1. Purpose of Each Piece of Gear • Tri-lock carabiner: Rock-solid connection that won’t pop open while you’re managing a casualty. • Prusik cord: Versatile friction hitch — grabs rope, holds load, acts as progress capture. • Pinto pulley: Smooth and compact, reduces rope drag and makes lifting/lowering efficient. 2. Rescue Haul System (3:1 Mechanical Advantage) If a climber is suspended and needs to be raised slightly to transfer them of free them from their system, you can create a 3:1 mechanical advantage: 1. Clip the Pinto pulley to their bridge/central tie-in with the tri-lock. 2. Run the main line through the pulley. 3. Tie the prusik above the pulley as a progress capture. 4. Haul the free end — the pulley cuts friction, the prusik holds progress, and you’ve built a mini 3:1 system. 3. Controlled Lowering If the climber is injured and needs to be lowered. 1. Rescuer ties in above the casualty. 2. Use the prusik + Pinto pulley as a friction combo for a smoother, safer descent. 3. Tri-lock keeps everything secure at the master point. 4. Why This Works • The Prusik acts as a progress capture (critical if you need to lift slightly). • The Pinto Pulley reduces friction, so you waste less energy and have more control. • The Tri-lock Carabiner ensures no accidental opening while loaded in a high-stakes rescue. ✅ Important Note: These are supporting tools for a rescue. In real aerial rescue, you should already be tied in on your own independent system, and you may need additional gear (like a descent device or extra pulleys) depending on the rescue scenario. Practice with your crew before applying in the field — aerial rescues are fast-moving and high-risk. This setup has saved me serious time and effort when practiced with my crew.
1 like • Sep 1
Awesome Tip!
1-1 of 1
Christian Yesslith
1
4points to level up
@christian-yesslith-5607
ISA Certified Tree Climber, UCFC QLCAT/QILCAT

Active 89d ago
Joined Sep 1, 2025