A pair of documentary filmmakers wrapped up their many hours of footage of treeclimbers last weekend with a trip to Cornbread Creek in the north Georgia mountains for the May 8 "Second Saturday Wilderness Climb." It was their eighth trip from Birmingham to the Atlanta area for the filming of the ducmentary.
Writer Alica Blackwood and photographer Randy Crow said they expect to spend the next month editing the 12-plus hours of video and distilling it down to a 20-minute documentary that they plan to enter in several film festivals around the Southeast.
Once the documentary is finished, Crow said they hope to continue working with the recreational treeclimbing community to create a longer feature-length program on the rapidly growing sport.
The first documentary likely will be entered in festivals in both Birmingham and Atlanta later this year, and several copies of the video will be provided to the treeclimbers who are featured in it.
"We're basically focusing on the five main people behind recreational treeclimbing in this part of the country," said Blackwood, a former reporter for The Associated Press who is writing the script for the documentary.
They have spent at least one full day with each of the five -- recreational treeclimbing founder Peter Jenkins and master treeclimbing instructors Abe Winters, Genevieve Summers, Joe Maher and Tim Kovar -- and also interviewed several other experienced treeclimbers for the documentary.
The May "Second Saturday" climb started at a fast-food restaurant about an hour north of Atlanta (Note for Jim K.: There likely will be video footage of our waitress, a girl called Dawn who didn't have a double-barreled name but who shouted our breakfast orders so loudly that she made up for it).
Joe and I arrived just after 8 a.m., to find Alica and Randy waiting for us in the parking lot. Peter Jenkins arrived a few minutes later, followed quickly by Abe Winters, John Routon and Rod Justice.
We convoyed north for another 35 miles to the Cornbread Creek climbing area, which is five miles back into a wilderness area from the nearest powerline and paved road.
Randy filmed Peter and Joe as they started their attack on Big Mama Pine, a very difficult Eastern white pine in a dense rhododendron thicket that had previously been climbed to about three-fourths of its height. After about three hours they both managed to work to within a few feet of the crown. Peter said his head was about two feet below the crown, which he measured at 158 feet.
Peter also made other measurements of the tree, which he hoped to nominate for a possible state record.
Abe and John picked out a pair of previously unclimbed 90-foot white oaks nearby, and each made solo climbs to the main crotches in those trees.
Everybody else, including Alica and Randy, climbed in the famous yellow poplar named Marilyn that has a breathtaking 360-degree view of the surrounding mountains and 751,000-acre wilderness area, including the nearby Appalachian Trail and the Eastern Continental Divide. Streams east of the ridgeline all flow to the Atlantic Ocean, while those a few hundred yards away on the western slope all flow to the Gulf of Mexico.
Alica and Randy filmed an interview with Rod in the main crotch at about 95 feet up, on the use of treeclimbing to help physically challenged children. Rod told them about the treeclimbing program at YWCA Camp Cavelle in Michigan, which someday might be expanded to other camps for physically challenged kids around the country.
I climbed on up, reaching a point on a four-inch limb that was about 20 feet above the main crotch. There was not a good spot there to hang out, so I descended and acted as ground support for the other climbers.
After repacking our equipment, we convoyed south about 15 miles to the "quaint" (that is the local chamber of commerce's description, I personally think its just a patently fake tourist trap) alpine village of Helen, Ga., where we dined on sandwiches and cold adult beverages at a small cafe on the east bank of the Chattahoochee River.
The next "Second Saturday Wilderness Climb" is tentatively set for June 12 and is open to all experienced treeclimbers who will be in the Atlanta/north Georgia area that day. Details about the upcoming climb will be posted later on the the message board.