Nick-
I'm glad you started this new post. I was getting tired of scrolling through the New Jersey forum. Like we've posted before, I cannot agree with you more. Druid Hill Park has some amazing trees and it would be great if we could climb there uninhibited. I hate looking over my shoulder when I've climbed there. Being on guard is not why I climb, I do it for the relaxation aspect. Someone else on this message board said they had actually been kicked out by some cops while they were climbing. This was after the cops had watched them for a while. I'd love to get a unfied front together to approach the park administrator, but I also fear that this will lead to more bureaucracy and red tape. However, if we went to him as a group rather than an individual, then maybe he'd see that we're not just a crazy guy with a hankerin' for messin' up trees. We could arrange for an on-site demonstration to show him that we use safe climbing practices, both for us and the trees. Maybe we could scout out a few trees and propose them as 'homebase' trees. Maybe we could climb on a trial basis, so they could see that we're not cowboys with no regard for safety or the environment. We could propose to take care of the trees we climb, ie-clearing deadwood, cleaning them up, which would decrease problems with stuff falling on regular park users. We could offer to clean up the area around the trees we climb by picking up trash, etc. The more we could propose to do to improve the park in order to get what we want, the better. How can they refuse free volunteer efforts to improve and beautify a city park? We'd need to show him that we know a lot about which trees are safe to climb and which are hazards, ie-that we are trained and knowledgeable. This way we could survey them for the city's maintenance folks. Nick, I don't know if you noticed or not, but Druid Hill Park has certain problem areas of open-air drug dealing and other loitering issues. It is beyond me as a resposible adult how an institution (city park officials, city government, police) can deny us of what I see as our god given right to climb trees when they can't even control the drug dealing in the park. Just up the road and also within the park is the Baltimore Zoo. I have been working on a project there for the past 2 years and have gotten to know several of the higher-up people in that organization. They actually have one of those mobile climbing walls in the zoo that you can climb for a few bucks. Kids seem to love it because it is always busy. How great it would be to introduce those kids to the wonders of climbing trees. The zoo is also heavily involved in education programs, like conservation. Wouldn't it be cool to get sponsorship from the zoo to start a grove, and they could market it under their education initiative. Just look at that post on this web board from the guy who climbed up to the eagles nest to retrieve the transmitter. Davey tree does all of the tree care work on the zoo grounds, and I've gotten to know one of the main guys. I'm curious as to whether they do any of the tree maintenance out in the park. If they do they could be an invaluable resource for us as they have some professional clout. All said and done Druid Hill could become a great climbing grove for the DC/Baltimore area. To pull it off would take some hard work, and some even harder convincing of the right people. I'm wiiling to give it a try with some help from the rest of the tree climbing community. I feel that the only way to achieve our goals is to work as a group as a united front.