Thank you, Treeman, for your candid description of your own introduction to treeclimbing as a profession. As a carpentry contractor who has been drawn to climbing as a form of recreation, I have often wondered what the attraction is. Lord knows, my wife of nearly 40 years can't figure it out. She thinks I'm crazy. I too have many of the behavioral traits asscociated with ADD/HD. These were only recognized in my instance in the last three years. For the first half century of my life I struggled to hold onto jobs, to finish projects I had started, to pay attention to details, and generally to focus when faced with boring tasks. I won't say that tree climbing is the perfect outlet for me because for one thing, I have less energy than I used to have. And, thus far I have not found a local soulmate to climb with. But there are elements about the activity of climbing into trees which make it a welcome respite from the stresses of running a home remodeling business. Learning to deal with immediate and palpable risk is a positve for me. Basically, if I don't continually work on mastering known climbing techniques and practices, I risk serious injury or death with every climb. There are very few careers today (apart perhaps from firefighting) which have the potential to be so life threatening. The necessity to focus on the immediate task, to size up the particular challenges presented by a particular tree, and to solve each problem as it presents itself - these are all things which I find bring a lot of satisfaction when practised regularly. Another attraction for me is perhaps the ego food of being on the cusp of an as yet unfamiliar sport, of being able to share my enthusiasm with others, of being recognized as a pioneer on a new frontier, or maybe just being accepted as someone who cares about the welfare of a part of nature which most of the human race sees as either a source of shade from the sun or firewood to warm the winter night. I sense traces of the exhibitionist in a number of the postings on this message board. Nothing wrong with this, but I do think each of us needs to think also about projecting those other motivations which draw us to this sport/work. In a past era of my life I was a part-time magician. I was captivated by fooling my audiences. The better my technique, the more certain I could be of tricking the spectator. I realized that I got off on essentially telling my audience that I knew something they didn't know, and I was going to use it to fool their senses. They would then ask, "how'd you do that?" As a magician I was bound by the tenets of the craft to say that I could not reveal these secrets. I gradually got less and less satisfaction from plying the trickster.
Well, tree climbing can probably seem magical to many of us at times, but we should be eager to include others in what we are about, and not to convey the impression that tree climbers have any sort of secret knowledge.
For myself, I'd like to see a feature film with a tree climbing segment in it. This might do for our sport what the film Breaking Away did for the sport of cycling generally and cycle racing in particular.
In the meantime, I like the idea of TCI developing literature, decals, more training programs, etc. by which we can properly publicize the sport/art/craft of tree climbing.