Thanks for the explanation, Peter. Personally, I have no problem whatsoever with the existence of a private instructor forum, for all the reasons you give, and even if the only reason was that it was your website and you felt like it.
I would love to take some training from TCI, since it is the first and most established of the schools, but time and money constraints prevent me from doing so, either down there or up here near to home.
I would still like to have some degree of TCI influence in my learning, however, even if it only took the form of literature. How is it that the oldest, most established, most influential, arguably the best, tree climbing teaching institution cannot (or will not) provide a customer with an official TCI climbing manual?
There could be separate texts for all the levels from Basic on up to Instructor, they would cover the same basic information that would be taught in a course, and they might even function as texts for students at TCI.
Obviously, reading one of these books would not be the same as also having access to the knowledge and experience that an instructor brings to an actual course, and relying solely on the book might not be as safe as attending a class to learn.
However, there must be many people like me who can't (or even won't) attend your courses, but who are going to learn by themselves anyway. At present, the only influence you have on people like me is this forum, but if you published books explaining the TCI way, you could be having considerably more influence on us, albeit not as much as on a student. A disclaimer ensures that you are not liable, and, of course, nobody expects you to give any degree of certification to a book-reading customer.
TCI people say that providing information without an accompanying course is unsafe, but I would argue that withholding information from people who are going to self-teach anyway is even more unsafe. By selling information to people who cannot (or will not) attend actual TCI classes, you are still doing the most you can to help keep these climbers safe. Think of it in terms of harm reduction, if you will. This would show concern for safety, not the opposite.
This wouldn't even have to be solely an act of altruism; you presumably would price the books to make a profit, and, if the books were good, they would likely be used by other tree climbing schools lacking the means to publish their own. Furthermore, I cannot imagine why publishing your own training manuals wouldn't enhance your legitimacy in the eyes of bureaucracies, both government and private, and the general public, with a resulting increase in the legitimacy of tree climbing in general.
What do you think?
Cheers!
Brad