This is what I see when I look at Mike Oxman’s photo. This commentary has nothing to do with the person Paul Sisson.
1. I see a man branch walking a tree with an established moss mat on the tree surfaces. Moss mats are fragile and can take decades, if not centuries, to mature on a tree. They are easily kicked off with a light boot swipe. In the case of branch walking where friction is needed to walk backwards, one can expect extensive moss damage. Moss is very slippery and much more fragile when wet as well. That is why it grows so well in the northwest trees; is wet all of the time. This is certainly not “leave no trace†climbing. Imagine how this tree will look with a couple of dozen climbers ascending this tree. This is in a park too. Not a very good model for the public to see.
2. The man below has no head protection. I am not sure what he is doing with the rope but he is certainly engaged with the climb. Trees are more fragile than rock. A gentle touch of a rope can send a high dead branch crashing down, sometimes without notice until it makes impact. It could be a small dead branch the diameter of a quarter but it can cause injury when it falls from height.
These two observations deal with climbing standards; leave no trace and proper protection for the ground team. There are many parts to the puzzle of assembling a working standard for responsible recreational tree climbing that is not only safe for the climbers, but friendly to the hosts of our climbs- the trees themselves.
Tree climbing is not yet a mainstream activity as is rock climbing. I share many of the concerns of canopy researchers that the human masses will hurt or kill that which they love, in this case trees. For that reason I am grateful that tree climbing has not rocketed into the spotlight with all of the media attention TCI has received the past 21 years.
This brings us back to the conversation of what it is to be responsible in our climbing technique and our relationship to the trees we climb. A new folder will appear shortly on this message board and it will be titled “Tree Climbing Standards Conversationâ€. We will break the parts down as Redpanda suggested but with more detail. This community will have an opportunity to contribute to a gathering of ideas to be later assembled and presented to you as a community for further input.
I personally want to thank all of you that participate on this message board. I encourage those that just read the postings here to participate as well, no matter what level of tree climbing experience you have. Your postings confirm my opinion that tree climbers are a special kind of people- kind, sharing, very intelligent, rebellious, inventive, risk taking, controversial, not average kind of people. Thank you for making this message board a great place to hang out and get different opinions and ideas.
Waving from a treetop,
Peter Treeman Jenkins