Treeman and all TCI instructors and facilitators,
Pay to post? I'm absolutely amazed. You are taking a step to doom your website to irrelevancy.
I find this move astounding, and should make it clear it is insulting that you (meaning TCI) would choose to do such a thing. Look at this posting thread. Between myself, Tom, Jim, and Nick, we account for TWENTY PERCENT of the activity on your board. That's only four members!
So, PAY ATTENTION, the writing is on your computer screen! You are on the verge of slipping farther away from the dominant position you aspire to!
This is the longest post I've ever put on your board, and it appears that due to the proposed changes to your setup, it will be the last. I will not join TCI as a member; the 2.8% of postings posted under redpanda are not a privelege worth anything monetarily. In fact, I liked to think that I that I was actually contributing something!
By way of goodbye I would like to respectfully offer my view on the relevancy of TCI. Perhaps it was time for me to ruffle some feathers, and I hope TCI members are mature enough to accept some opinions from far outside your sphere of influence. I look forward to meeting some of you one day,and appreciate the networking made on this forum, and hope you do not feel too personally insulted by what follows, or that I am being a little too egotistical and presumptuous. There have been several similar, impassioned messages like this one posted on this site, and before long everyone will have moved on from the few minutes its taking you to read it. But, most importantly, I'll know I have finally come out and contributed my completely external, and perhaps unwanted, suggestions on TCI's future.
I participate on these www forums from another country. There are only two stars next to my name, but I will get quite angry if anyone casts my abilities simply because I have not taken a TCI basic, facilitators, or instructors course. In the SE corner of Australia on the island of Tasmania, we have the tallest and biggest angiosperm forests and trees in the world. I have a few years climbing in these trees. I know dozens of people who have safely climbed and descended these trees for a variety of reasons, and I am positive that most are far less obsessed with rope skills than me. We also have world class rockclimbing, and caving, vertical search and rescue, cave rescue exercises, and several commercial abseiling/rapping opportunities, and I am thankful enough to have the energy and time to be involved in these ropes-linked pursuits. I know I have put in a great deal of time and energy into self training and participating in discussions, and that I have done so to a level that I feel self-certified.
I have never met anyone in person who has taken TCI courses. Yet by adopting the name T.C. International, you have taken on the role of the worldwide umbrella group. The responsibility of that role is to effectively assume a leadership position, not to work on an exclusive club. Optimally, a leadership position requires both fostering beginners, and being involved with the cutting edge.
I know that you want TCI to be the best, and brightest, but your exclusive approach to techique, and, it appears, conversation makes TCI a poor candidate for this leadership role.
Recent threads have outlined some excellent steps for TCI, and have highlighted some reluctance to take those steps. *Publish the manual*, freely as a .pdf file, and become the acknowledged experts. Look at Mountaineering: Freedom of the Hills. It established the Seattle Mountaineers lub as the premier training organizaation in the English language world. If you fail to share your manuals, it just makes others more perplexed that you insist on handing out certifications. How do I know what your facilitators and instructors ribbons mean if I don't know what checklist they passed to gain them? Individually, the members of TCI have much to offer, and surely recognize the value of sharing it. But if the organization as a whole stagnates in that regard, you will watch the cutting edge pass you by quickly.
Closing off your message board would be a sure sign you are not willing to integrate outside opinion or experiences. Your membership is obviously centred around Atlanta, and your organizations time in trees is probably quite heavy on the SE USA species. Yet if you close your forums off to visitors from other countries, and declare yourself the International organization, you are missing out on the rest of the magic tree types around the rest of the world. What experience do TCI members have in climbing blackwoods or Lagarostrobus or Adansonia or Tingle trees or Swamp Gums or Karris or Kauris? Why would you close off your forums to the people who do? I've studied trees in which the lowest branch is TWICE as high as the top of Nimrod in the Founders Grove, and in species that have never grown naturally in the northern hemisphere. I wouldn't necessarily take that to mean I have experience in white oaks, or pine trees. Yet when your message board closes off, I will have to inquire about those tree types from other sources. TCi-forums will have a reduced population of members, less activity, less scope, less vision, less creativity, fewer ideas, and ultimately less relevancy. It would be a waste of money.
I have met several people who have climbed giant, towering trees who have never heard of your organization, and will never take your classes, respect your certifications, or appreciate that you are THE academy. I'd like to have one of your ribbons, but it would cost me hundreds of dollars and open few doors. I'm proud of the trees I've climbed, measured, studied, and appreciated. Learning about rope and tree skills on the web has been a major advantage in doing this safely. But the actual amount of information TCI offers is disappointingly small. Every so often some good tips come up on the site, and most of my posts have tried to spark or encourage that. I prowl the web regularly for any new skills in treeclimbing, because I am absolutely terrified of those old, decayed Eucalyptus trees, and because I am responsible for those lovely field assistants climbing them with me. By swallowing every last bit of technique I can rest easier knowing that we are using the best possible practice to get us down safe. Same basic reasons everyone wants to learn more.
However, in the final judgement, I don't use any of your techniques. I don't even really know what your techniques are! It seems there is an amazing inability to describe what you do. (The slip knot tied regularly below the novice's DdRT hitch is exceedingly elegant, by the way.)
Go look at the post on anchoring a rope that I place in the technique forum (28-10-04), and see how many serious responses there have been.
As an archive, or a resource, TCI has NOTHING for me except this web board. There is not even a listing of relevant knots for motivated prospective students to brush up on in advance. The general public can go browse the library of a university, and the librarians will encourage the practice. Even though the university may risk losing a potential tuition-paying student by allowing them to read the material, it is more likely that this motivated library visitor will be excited enough to follow through with the formal training.
It is impressive and commendable your energy and efforts in fostering new experiences for complete novices. Its fantastic, and surely a dream come true! However, to be an effective leader, you need to also be willing to increase the skills and knowledge within your own organization, and on a greater scale, within the entire discipline. Consider renaming TCI to the "Atlanta Treeclimbing Academy," if it is not able to handle this responsibility.
Treeman- Facilitate excellence in the discipline, and be stronger in regards to all the threats about TCI's legitimacy, threats from porno pushers, and threats to your liability from new, potentially dangerous and unapproved techniques. As the others wrote, thanks for briefly fostering what would eventually become a substantial resource. But truly, the bandwidth and energy you spend on the WWW forums will pay you back a thousandfold by being the forum.
Closing your www forum to non members posting is an amazingly foolish step, and I am calling you on it, Peter. Don't sully TCI's WWW reputation any more than it already has been. You've done a great job in the discipline and obviously sparked a passion in many fantastic teachers. Now publish the manual, foster the forums, and proudly share it with climbers around the world!
The cutting edge of treeclimbing won't stay still...