Ground to Crown: Climbing the Giant Sequoia

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  • čas přidán 15. 12. 2012
  • Ground to Crown is a short-form documentary about four young tree climbers and their journey to climb old growth Giant Sequoia trees in California. Scaling the dizzying heights of some of the tallest trees in North America, their efforts not only assist researchers from University of California at Berkley, but also give them a unique perspective on the forests and their place in it.
    This video collaboration project is a collaboration by:
    Dave Katz www.tenacityinpursuit.com
    Colin Crilley ccrilley.com/
    Jake Rudin www.jakerudin.com
    Rob Moore www.rmelephant.com
    Dan Rudin danrudin.com/
    With support from:
    Cornell Tree Climbing Institute treeclimbing.coe.cornell.edu
    PMI Climbing Equipment www.pmirope.com
    Center for Forestry at UCB forestry.berkeley.edu
    Special Thanks to:
    Mark Holton @ Cornell Outdoor Education
    www.coe.cornell.edu
    Ken Somers @ Center for Forestry, University of California at Berkeley forestry.berkeley.edu
    Teri Griffis, L.A. Moran Reforestation Center, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection
    daviswiki.org/l.a._moran_refor...
    Ken Hauser @ Pigeon Mountain Industries
    www.pmirope.com

Komentáře • 142

  • @marcusporras9571
    @marcusporras9571 Před 4 lety +10

    The sequoia tree is something magnificent. I've gone about 6 times since the parks reopened. I've immersed myself completely. Never knowing when it's the last time I'll see them.

  • @TK-zf7sx
    @TK-zf7sx Před 4 lety +17

    There is a book called "The Wild Trees", by Richard Preston. It tells the story of some of the people who first started finding and climbing the tallest redwoods on the California and Oregon coast. If you liked this video, look for the book.

    • @danielkosta3134
      @danielkosta3134 Před rokem

      Excellent book. Well worth seeking out and reading.

    • @kennethsizer6217
      @kennethsizer6217 Před rokem

      Bonus: If you get the audiobook, there are snippets of Steve Sillett and Marie Antoine interviews toward the end.

  • @crispinjulius5032
    @crispinjulius5032 Před 4 lety +1

    So much majesty in these beautiful trees. Truly a wonder of the Earth.

  • @minenotyours6906
    @minenotyours6906 Před 8 lety +12

    the scene where I think his name is Collin was standing on top of the enormous stump with the new tree growing from the middle.That scene was minor to most people and they probably do not see the significance that I seen but it was so cool.worth a 1000 words.Very awesome what you guys do keep the videos coming.

    • @superchknmonkey
      @superchknmonkey Před 8 lety +1

      +mine not yours we love that shot too. :)

    • @danielkosta3134
      @danielkosta3134 Před rokem

      A beautiful testament of rebirth and the continuation of the species.

  • @roderickrayrutledge2740
    @roderickrayrutledge2740 Před 3 lety +2

    The tree of all trees. ❤🙏

  • @jandunn169
    @jandunn169 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you....so much for your work and dedication to these trees. .I would love to see a canopy with fire caves, huckleberry, ferns and more lichen like Richard Preston describes in his book "Wild Trees"

  • @bigdaddy9976
    @bigdaddy9976 Před 10 lety

    Beautiful view. Thanks for the great video from the top of a Giant Sequoia.

  • @LCHLLO2008
    @LCHLLO2008 Před 10 lety +1

    great work amigos .Nice to see people enjoying these incredible trees absolutely stunning .Nature at its best :)

  • @PatrickBrianRiordan
    @PatrickBrianRiordan Před rokem

    This is really cool! Thanks for sharing!

  • @lostinthewoods7369
    @lostinthewoods7369 Před 5 lety +2

    Very interesting! Looks like the experience of a lifetime!

  • @billhart9832
    @billhart9832 Před 5 lety

    Thoroughly enjoyable and enlightening. Nice work!

  • @bigdaddy9976
    @bigdaddy9976 Před 10 lety

    I'd love to have a job like this. Not only climbing the Sequoia but harvesting the cone to help continue the species for future generations to enjoy.

  • @yayabrazie
    @yayabrazie Před 9 lety +2

    Loved this video and would love to do this for a living. Im an environmental studies major in NY.

  • @rsusannah
    @rsusannah Před 8 lety +1

    Fantastic video! That would be my absolute dream job!

  • @naomiklijs5912
    @naomiklijs5912 Před 8 lety

    beautiful.. Great job!

  • @yorkshire_saddlehunter184

    Just comes to show the importance of always being on a tether around the main trunk. Good video and good information guys. The crossbow is mint! 😁

  • @selinao.4966
    @selinao.4966 Před 8 lety +1

    this is so Incredible! I wish that I can do this one day too!♥

  • @treeboss5626
    @treeboss5626 Před 2 lety

    First time I've seen someone use two hand acenders one straped to you that cool

  • @hallets1956
    @hallets1956 Před 10 lety

    Their place in the forest? THEY belong there, we DON'T!!! Absolutely awesome guys :)

  • @trifectafloatern2211
    @trifectafloatern2211 Před 10 lety +6

    Imagine freeclimbing that beast! :p

  • @brockjones1364
    @brockjones1364 Před 11 lety +1

    My kids have been hanging from trees, and zip lining since they were literally babies. I don't know the earliest age they climbed with me. I think haters are just envious, contemptuous people that cannot see past who they are themselves.

  • @trevethan82319841
    @trevethan82319841 Před 8 lety

    i love the idea to use a crossbow to get the throw line into the tree very clever

  • @devlindoesthings
    @devlindoesthings Před 5 lety

    I’m so jealous! Recently I’ve started a free climbing channel where I climb trees around my area. Nothing particularly difficult apart from just climbing up trees where the first branch is 4 or 5 metres up.

  • @coreygrua3271
    @coreygrua3271 Před rokem

    One gains HOPE.

  • @ScoutBobrman862
    @ScoutBobrman862 Před 11 lety +2

    So you climbed a tree when you were only 3 years old..Fascinating. Kind of difficult when most 3 year old's are having a rough time getting from point A to point B trying to balance the weight of their head before falling over. Not to mention also that the the average 3 yr old has an average stumpy-leg length of only 8-10 inches. You either must have had the upper body strength of Arnold Swartzeneggar or you used rope and had the ingenuity of using it to haul yourself up the tree...lol

  • @chamness964
    @chamness964 Před 8 lety +3

    I want to climb with you all. i would love to climb them. i have 10 yrs in climbing tree's. But nothing that big or tall..

  • @tomdavis7595
    @tomdavis7595 Před 4 lety +6

    The tree is like, I grow this tall so know one would bug me and thy still found a way.😬

    • @BigCroca
      @BigCroca Před 4 lety +1

      the tree is like nothing because trees cant speak or think in any human language.

    • @elliottheap8969
      @elliottheap8969 Před 4 lety +1

      Bruh Mania r/whooosh

  • @yakubpolyapolys4085
    @yakubpolyapolys4085 Před 7 lety +1

    it's my biggest aim to climb Sequoia

  • @Kwint.
    @Kwint. Před 7 lety

    grapje hoor hoi toekomst zo leuk om je te zien wat zie je er leuk uit! :D

  • @claudeanthony468
    @claudeanthony468 Před 11 lety

    Fantastic guys great stuff if you ever come to Australia we can show you around in a place called the ancient forest not many people know it as that name

  • @ansakovith2011
    @ansakovith2011 Před 10 lety

    ..это прекрасно ..

  • @tterraggarret
    @tterraggarret Před 10 lety +3

    Looks like so much fun. Can I come and help?

  • @bear304inc5
    @bear304inc5 Před 6 lety

    Awesome video, thanks for posting. One thing though the young man in the yellow helmet should really consider using biners to lock those hand ascenders on the rope, I've had them come off the rope before climbing.

  • @mink33
    @mink33 Před 11 lety

    Awesome video guys; really enjoyed it. I guess you don't mind heights eh? The M&N thing was epic.

  • @theroverscout
    @theroverscout Před 7 lety +1

    awesome work guys, if you want to get more efficient check out the double bungee climbing system by onrope1.

  • @pacman36jfj
    @pacman36jfj Před 8 lety

    cool video though! this looks awsome

  • @lyonstea8352
    @lyonstea8352 Před 11 lety +2

    Great job guys my family own 97 acre forest i love to set up onto the cliff face looking onto the other tress and hills i really love this video. :)

  • @bigdaddy9976
    @bigdaddy9976 Před 10 lety

    You guys must have some unbelievable upper body strength. How do you train for tree climbing?

  • @monimal4670
    @monimal4670 Před 4 lety

    how doesnt this have more views

  • @johnlocke1519
    @johnlocke1519 Před 9 lety

    Great video man.. It really kept me interested throughout the entire thing.. But did he really drop the M&M from the top?

    • @superchknmonkey
      @superchknmonkey Před 9 lety +2

      John Locke The M&M is kinda like Santa Clause, you know the truth, but do you really want to know the answer?

  • @arnoldmeulen
    @arnoldmeulen Před 5 lety

    Very interesting and good video.
    I like it but why do you need so many carabiners in a tree?

  • @gnarmarmilla
    @gnarmarmilla Před 2 lety

    So awesome…
    I see this was posted 9 years ago, I am wondering, would these fine lads be using rope runner pros or Akimbo’s to ascend and descend on those lines today?
    I just bought a Rope Runner Pro and am using it for arborist work and as I thought about how fun climbing is I remembered these awesome trees that I once lived 30 minutes away from before I moved to Illinois for the last 22 years. That’s what made me look this up. I’m so thankful to see that you guys are doing this and that you love these precious forests like I do. May God bless you all to do great work. Amen
    You heard of the Snowline Lodge?
    My parents managed it for about a year and so we used to visit these trees as my dad and mom loved nature.
    Hope to climb one someday myself.

    • @danielkosta3134
      @danielkosta3134 Před rokem

      Excellent book. Well worth seeking out and reading.

  • @altawolf8946
    @altawolf8946 Před 11 lety +1

    Great video and keep up with the hard work. However I'm biased to Humboldt State Univ. Forestry program. Go JACKS!!!

  • @biterface03
    @biterface03 Před 9 lety

    ideal

  • @graemeday8274
    @graemeday8274 Před rokem

    Have any of you looked into foot and knee ascenders used by arborists rather than pulling up using your arms

  • @lk5355
    @lk5355 Před 3 lety

    Dang-ers! I climb by night with my eyes closed. That way nobody can see me. With no aid or pro'. Redwood bark truly requires trust. Going on half a century of exploits not recorded. Thank you for sharing yours!

  • @Preecy
    @Preecy Před 9 lety +4

    I would just sit at the top throwing those seed cones off to see how long it would take to hit the ground lol

  • @collapsibletank
    @collapsibletank Před 10 lety +6

    "2..4..6..8..Forty...2..4..6..8..Fifty...2..4..6..8...Forty-eight..."..?! Better to undercount I suppose..... :O)

  • @ryangreenhalgh2572
    @ryangreenhalgh2572 Před 8 měsíci

    So after you fire the tagline from the crossbow, how do you know for certain what branch it went around near the top of the tree? And how do you know that that branch is healthy? I imagine you could have binoculars or something, but it seems like there must be some way to verify the stability of the anchor branch, right? Otherwise you're just ascending 200ft up a fixed line where you don't even know if the top anchor is secure. (I'm used to rock climbing where you can always visually inspect your anchors.)

  • @ROBERTBUDA-RBMV
    @ROBERTBUDA-RBMV Před 10 lety

    good job frends

  • @Iithuanianboy
    @Iithuanianboy Před 5 lety

    Are your ascenders your only attachment point to the ropes?? Those aren't meant to take a shock load, or handle a fall.

  • @aaronw8554
    @aaronw8554 Před 11 lety

    I bet you were by far the coolest tree climber's in High school.
    Jk lol, great vid

  • @VanD3rp
    @VanD3rp Před 10 lety +1

    1:52 Just like the beginning of E.T.

  • @pacman36jfj
    @pacman36jfj Před 8 lety

    I dabble in tree climbing myself. wondering if you were using cambium protectors? or did you use SRT?

    • @superchknmonkey
      @superchknmonkey Před 8 lety

      +j f hey! yes, we use cambium protectors once we make it up into the branches and transfer onto DRT.

  • @johnburens3395
    @johnburens3395 Před 10 lety +3

    Dave, are you guys climbing in the Whitaker forest section of Redwood Mountain grove? If so, how can I get permission to investigate this section of the grove? I have explored most of Redwood Mountain grove. Of the 67 recognized groves I have been to 39 and of the top 40 biggest Giant Sequoias I have visited 32 of them.

    • @DavidKatz
      @DavidKatz Před 10 lety

      John - Take a look here to learn more about UCB's Center for Forestry ucanr.edu/sites/cff/

    • @johnburens3395
      @johnburens3395 Před 10 lety +1

      Thanks, Maybe I can help you guys out...

  • @JonathanJones33
    @JonathanJones33 Před 5 lety

    Are you guys using only ascenders on your main climbing line? I couldn't tell but it doesn't look like you have any kind of friction hitch from your harness to the main line.

  • @swithinbarclay4797
    @swithinbarclay4797 Před 4 lety

    Could you . . . the Lads of Tenacity . . . imagine a certain tall lanky long-haired long-bearded Scotsman--by the name of Johnnie Muir--alongside of you--on Sequoia Climbs? He'd be reveling even more than you would--if THAT can be believed!!

  • @Shamshir_Shaikh
    @Shamshir_Shaikh Před 9 lety

    Good Job Guys, make more trees in world like this. can they be Grown in India or they need different types of soil which is available in US only ?

    • @rabhaw9629
      @rabhaw9629 Před 8 lety

      +shamshir sheikh there are some in Belfast in the UK.

    • @Shamshir_Shaikh
      @Shamshir_Shaikh Před 8 lety

      Thanks, can they be grown in Asian countries ?

    • @rabhaw9629
      @rabhaw9629 Před 8 lety +1

      they must be able to , Coastal areas and mountain ranges , the Himalayan sub continent must have some.

    • @Shamshir_Shaikh
      @Shamshir_Shaikh Před 8 lety

      Thanks Bro

    • @TSideWes805
      @TSideWes805 Před 8 lety

      +shamshir sheikh Depends where in India. If you try growing Sequoias in the hot and humid lowlands, it'll succumb to root rot and die, but if you live in the similar environment to the Giant Sequoias, such as the Himalayan foothills, you might.

  • @jasoncurtis604
    @jasoncurtis604 Před 8 lety +1

    what is that blue tool that he used to climb the rope?

    • @treesareshady
      @treesareshady Před 8 lety +1

      +Jason Curtis hand ascender

    • @thelollerchef
      @thelollerchef Před 8 lety

      +Jason Curtis they're just generally called ascenders. mechanical devices we can use to climb the ropes for a variety of purposes :)

    • @mroy1300
      @mroy1300 Před 6 lety

      thelollerchef
      Is it safe to ascend using your hand ascenders as anchors to the rope? I though you needed a rope wrench or unisender... I assume they are tying into the rope as they go up for safety.

  • @bigdaddy9976
    @bigdaddy9976 Před 10 lety

    What is the difference between the Giant Sequoia and the California Redwood?

    • @CornellTreeClimbing
      @CornellTreeClimbing Před 6 lety

      Two of the three species of redwood. Sequoia are larger by volume, coastals are taller

  • @coreyguice5685
    @coreyguice5685 Před 9 lety +2

    ... and I only want 1 seed.

  • @kmanmcshane
    @kmanmcshane Před 7 lety +18

    get a foot ascender.

  • @radekkubec1573
    @radekkubec1573 Před 10 lety

    It is wery nice, I would like, I would try it.

  • @Ben7x26
    @Ben7x26 Před 2 lety

    Its an awesome experience but to many people climing will hurt the tree. You can clearly see that they were not the first.

  • @samxyx
    @samxyx Před 8 lety +1

    How is that tree gonna reproduce if you harvest all of its pine cones. Isn't that bad for the tree?

    • @ivankebabremover6764
      @ivankebabremover6764 Před 8 lety

      I'm sure they wouldn't take them all. But if they did, these trees live thousands of years so its nothing on the trees timeline.

  • @sjoly1987
    @sjoly1987 Před 9 lety

    It seems that his branch that "fell" was cut off very well...almost smooth @6:30. Otherwise good film.

    • @superchknmonkey
      @superchknmonkey Před 9 lety

      sjoly1987 It was cut into smaller pieces to be moved, the original branch that fell was twice that large.

  • @philmay7834
    @philmay7834 Před 4 lety

    I would definitely consider rock to be a living organism. Loosely speaking, of course.

  • @marekvollach7831
    @marekvollach7831 Před rokem

    NO VEHICLES…😢😢😢. As a Canadian watching this beautiful American treasure: I would want a respectful forbidding of vehicles to access these Glory-filled trees 🌲

  • @davidgorelle8967
    @davidgorelle8967 Před 7 lety

    It seems like you guys are using rock climbing rope. Its super stretchy. I would hate that. But still, i want to climb a Sequoia so bad. I've got to fly down there one day.

    • @CornellTreeClimbing
      @CornellTreeClimbing Před 6 lety +1

      It's nylon static line, and a bit stretchy even so, but 600 feet of NE Fly would weigh a ton. And still be pretty stretchy at that length.

  • @Carlos-ws2rj
    @Carlos-ws2rj Před 11 lety +1

    You should try climbing a blue whale

  • @ifell3
    @ifell3 Před 9 lety +2

    No such thing as a stupid question, but you've just got to the top and you need a pee?

    • @Muikku4_
      @Muikku4_ Před 9 lety +3

      ifell3 well then u pee

  • @Airserb
    @Airserb Před 11 lety

    nice vid guys ,... end lol :)

  • @mattmyers8307
    @mattmyers8307 Před 3 lety

    Good show would have been great if the distracting music were eliminated. Be nice to hear nature when watching it.

  • @daveking2184
    @daveking2184 Před 10 lety

    How much paid per bushel? I got 30 bucks working for simpson doing doug fir.

  • @streetskater521
    @streetskater521 Před rokem

    2:43 your boy got miscalculated

  • @Kwint.
    @Kwint. Před 7 lety

    ja maar gewn lekker

  • @coilstreeservice9398
    @coilstreeservice9398 Před 6 lety

    So collecting seeds just in case all the trees that are 2000 years old suddenly disappear you can replace them and people 2000 years from now can enjoy them? I think it's a long shot but okay man!👍

    • @allisonjuno7654
      @allisonjuno7654 Před 6 lety +1

      Coil's Tree Service no they’re planning ahead and planting new ones

  • @swithinbarclay4797
    @swithinbarclay4797 Před 4 lety

    "Tenacity"/Dave? Has USFS ever been interested in your work, for, say, an outfit of theirs, such as their Placerville [Coniferous] Nursery? Those Sequoia seedlings are really WILD and huge, to send down a packing shed's conveyor belt! Tell your Mom, for me, please Dave, "Shame on you!", for de-limbing your favorite childhood climbing tree, okay? This had to have been the Redwood Mountain Grove, right? That's the hugest of all of the Sequoia groves; there are many acres therein, set in 100% PURE Sequoia species composition; and, it's also where you will find the TALLEST Sequoias, perhaps 320'+, right? I've never been to RG, but I've learned these facts about this grove, and I'm achin' like crazy to go there, now. When I was a lad, I went all over Giant Forest, though. I saw all those Sugar, Ponderosa, and Jeffrey cones strewn around your feet; ever get a yen to climb the Big Boys, of those species? Being so tall, I could tell that the weather is quite DIFFERENT, up in the crowns, than it is on the ground. Hallelujah and Amen, to the GRAND work you do; I do not know, how much more, you could LOVE a Sequoia!!

  • @dkaroun
    @dkaroun Před 2 lety

    The nerdy version of rock climbers

  • @UBIGI
    @UBIGI Před 6 lety

    it's easy not climbing! 😃

  • @DonGorm
    @DonGorm Před 3 lety

    #FiminismzRoolz

  • @annestabile6361
    @annestabile6361 Před 8 lety

    Certainly Steve Sillett over at HSU and his team were the first to begin to ascend these trees for study using visual descriptions only. Why no nod or mention? Also, why haven't any of you answered the question asked by several peole: what does the taking of all the cones actually do to the living tree? Seems to me there are some big pieces missing. Katz casually mentions the study of DNA--what about the DNA is being studied, exactly? I'm with others who think you're overstepping some boundaries in your quest to "preserve" these trees. Having said that, the truth is, I don't really understand all the facets of this. I know it's a short vid for all of that but, clarification for us lay people concerned that you're just lumbermen in a different form would help. So, why cones by the bushel and what does taking them all do, if anything, to the trees?

    • @CornellTreeClimbing
      @CornellTreeClimbing Před 6 lety

      Good questions. It's hard to know where to begin...first, these trees produces tens of thousands of cones. If we spent a week up there we couldn't pick them all from even one tree. Second, we are doing this with the university of california, Berkeley, and CAL Fire...not fly by night organizations that are unconcerned with impact. This minuscule percentage of cone taken from this tree can be extracted at the seed bank and be used to replant areas that people destroyed in various ways....and those cones contain millions of seeds. There is no discernible impact of our climbing up there. Third, these trees are amazingly tough. We couldn't hurt them (climbing) if we tried. Everyone in a car, in a heated or cooled house, or eating food that is grown on the other side of the country is contributing in their tiny way to the destruction of the habitat, and thus the trees.

    • @jolllyroger1
      @jolllyroger1 Před 5 lety

      @@CornellTreeClimbing yeah they're you go people are destroying nature by eating food and breathing out co2 that these trees need to live.... Typical Berkeley idiocy..... Carbon is not bad for the environment carbon is all life that's the idiocy.... Global warming is a big bs lie created just to extort tax money from hard working people.... Back in 1977-78-79 they claimed it was the coming ice age..... And they got caught in their lies fraud and criminal tax schemes..... Back in 1972 they claimed that within 20 years oil would be gone the world would be starving and that Florida would be under water...... I met in norther California an environmentalist on a ski lift he was skiing but getting paid to do so because he was counting the spotted owls...... His words paraphrased were that owls were everywhere and that they were not endanger in any way yet he falsified his counts and went skiing..... When I said why don't you report the truth he said if he said there were lots of owls they would fire him and get someone that would count the way they wanted..... That's a true af story and I have seen many more examples of environmental terrorists controlling the truth with intimidating tactics..... Think about how many environmental taxes you pay today and that money is just stolen by the lying demon rats and crooked politicians..... And another note is these same politicians want open borders so they can traffic heroin guns other drugs child sex trafficking and illegal organ trafficking...... Just look at congressman Leeland Yee from San Francisco... He was busted for drug and gun running and only got 2 freaking years..... Why because all his political buddies pulled strings because they are involved...... Californication politicians are criminals stealing your tax dollars....... I want to know how much money from our tax dollars went to pay these kids to have fun.... I GURANTEE THIS IS A HUGE PROFIT BUSINESS..... I'll bet they work a couple weeks a year and get a huge income.... This is how environmental terrorism works..... And they want more taxes...... And look at San Francisco is full of feces and needles..... San Francisco spends 1.5 million a year to pick up used needles wtf

  • @AwosAtis
    @AwosAtis Před 6 lety

    Great production and videography. Would be great video if the guys holding the camera would keep their mouths shut.

  • @timothyandrewnielsen
    @timothyandrewnielsen Před 6 lety +2

    This is what it's like when girls collect my seed.

  • @brianmcleod7762
    @brianmcleod7762 Před 3 lety +1

    Putting a line in at 200 ft is definitely cheating. That’s not climbing a tree it’s climbing a rope. Not a thumbs downer though...

  • @squaredharbors5988
    @squaredharbors5988 Před 5 lety

    black bear cubs are way better

  • @allanahbromwich4003
    @allanahbromwich4003 Před 7 lety +1

    tree climbing is only good for one thing which is money

  • @user-ng2op2ix8z
    @user-ng2op2ix8z Před 7 měsíci

    AI can't pronounce!

  • @hansnelsen5926
    @hansnelsen5926 Před 3 lety

    Every one should know by now that tree houses are NOT good for trees. If I have to substantiate this you know nothing about trees. ALL TREE HOUSES. What about climbing trees? If large numbers of people do this, is this good for the trees? Research, maybe, but there is probably a cost benefit limit.

  • @JulesBartow
    @JulesBartow Před 10 lety

    All that lumber going to waste. A couple days with an MS 880 and it'd be gone. The closest thing will know about them will be your videoYour grandchildren can read about

  • @allanahbromwich4003
    @allanahbromwich4003 Před 7 lety

    chop tree get paid

  • @freeclimb64
    @freeclimb64 Před 10 lety +1

    That´s no climbing.
    It took me (and many others) to see, that you´re just go up using technical prusik.
    That´s absolutely boring hauling yourself & your gear.
    Sorry to say that - i started climbing 20 years ago and then these boring pictures.
    But probably - as far as i understand - your helping environment - well done!

    • @PINGPONGROCKSBRAH
      @PINGPONGROCKSBRAH Před 10 lety +5

      there is no way to climb a tree like this without some kind of gear.

    • @UBIGI
      @UBIGI Před 6 lety

      🙌👍

    • @TallTreesClub
      @TallTreesClub Před 6 lety

      It is probably possible, but not particularly safe. A video about a guy Sharma was recorded, but he had a safety line. On the other hand, given the right massive tree with thick bark ridges, it's possible someone could do it, and I suspect it's been done.

  • @lulzmoney99
    @lulzmoney99 Před 4 lety

    Too much talking, not enough climbing. Climbers really need to get over themselves. You're climbing a tree. Cool. Just do it and shut up already.

  • @DannyBoy443
    @DannyBoy443 Před 5 lety

    This is stupid. I was looking for a start to finish climb fully filmed on a GoPro. Lame.