It’s visually interesting to see where people are signed up as climbing. I can see the tight grouping in the southeast USA and the northeast USA as well. Possibly from the starting point of tree climbing as a recreation (technical rope and saddle climbing) that started here at the TCI school in Atlanta. But there is that tight cluster in the northeast as well. Could it be the trees? The east coast has thick populations and a wide variety of species of the climbable trees.
Now Japan has numerous climbers. I mean REALLY numerous. Japan had as its seed Atlanta (the training started here in Atlanta) added with a front page media personality, John Garthright, that took tree climbing to the top very fast with his TV shows, articles, books, and website www.treeclimbingjapan.com . Much faster than America, at this point. They too have lots of trees. The Japanese people hand planted incredible amounts of trees as a crop (tree farming) until they found a much cheaper source- America and Canada. So now you have vast forests over a century old with no harvesting in sight. And John Garthright who pushed the idea of climbing these forests for recreational purposes. Now there is visionary thinking! His other vision involves tree climbing as therapy and he has just received a degree on that subject.
But I digress. It will be interesting as other climbers sign up and we can see where this trend of technical tree climbing is going geographically.
BTW- when you toggle the bar down on the Climber Finder you get a broader view. Toggle the bar up you get a detailed road map. No doorsteps, but pretty close as far as location is concerned. I’m just getting the hang of it myself. A bit hypnotic in nature.
Waving from a treetop,
Peter Treeman Jenkins