Excellent, well explained, and very simple. You should not be climbing ropes if you can not do this. Sadly, the majority of tree climbers do Not practice rescue, even once a year, I'm working on changing this. And one of the drills we practice is climbing up the causality's rope and bringing them down as you mentioned. I look forward to seeing your level two video on this rescue. Thank you, Jim H.
Indeed, this is a minimum to know if you are working in ropes. I'd like it if the would put the Croll rescue in the L1 syllabus too. That would make a lot of things simpler when planning jobs and techs..
Greeting. First, I want to thank you for the effort and information you provide. I have a question, why do you have both a short and a long connection on one D ring? Isn't that one point for casualty?
Thank you!! Two things, I have the casualty on my cowstail and a short connection into the carabiner of the descender. So that is two seperate POA. Second, the rings on a harness are considered unquestionably reliable. When we aid climb all the connections go to the ventral D-ring as well. So that would not be an issue.
Thanks for the excellent instruction on a level 1 descending rescue! Why can't you put the victim's 2nd POA on your system vs on you? JIC it is weighted it will fall on the system not you?
Just as long as you keep the casualty on two independent point to you it is a good. What I am showing is the most acceptable version to my understanding in the region I work in. There are my ways to do ours tasks.
your videos are all great. Just a thought. If you going to do a training program, maybe do it on a day when they are not people making a noise in the background. Like I said, the videos are amazing and very helpful but the noise in the background is distracting.
I am aware of that. Unfortunately I do not get to pick and choose when paying customers have the room. So sometimes I wait for the worst to be over and sometimes I cant because I have limited time.
to the point, clear and still enjoyable/ Great video.
Awesome, thank you Bob🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
한국에서 Roppe Access IRATA 를 하고있는 청소유튜버 입니다~ 항상 영상 재미있게 잘보고 있습니다. 자주 들릴께요~^^
Great to hear!🙏🏻🙏🏻😃
Hi, great video, as always very simple to understand.
Glad you think so!
Excellent, well explained, and very simple. You should not be climbing ropes if you can not do this.
Sadly, the majority of tree climbers do Not practice rescue, even once a year, I'm working on changing this. And one of the drills we practice is climbing up the causality's rope and bringing them down as you mentioned. I look forward to seeing your level two video on this rescue. Thank you, Jim H.
Indeed, this is a minimum to know if you are working in ropes. I'd like it if the would put the Croll rescue in the L1 syllabus too. That would make a lot of things simpler when planning jobs and techs..
@@TheRopeAccessChannel SPRAT now requires your rescue for L1 to be from ascent, if you can not do this rescue, you don't pass the course, Jim H.
@@aerialrescuesolutions3277 yep, i know
Greeting. First, I want to thank you for the effort and information you provide. I have a question, why do you have both a short and a long connection on one D ring? Isn't that one point for casualty?
Thank you!!
Two things, I have the casualty on my cowstail and a short connection into the carabiner of the descender. So that is two seperate POA.
Second, the rings on a harness are considered unquestionably reliable. When we aid climb all the connections go to the ventral D-ring as well. So that would not be an issue.
Thanks for the excellent instruction on a level 1 descending rescue! Why can't you put the victim's 2nd POA on your system vs on you? JIC it is weighted it will fall on the system not you?
Just as long as you keep the casualty on two independent point to you it is a good. What I am showing is the most acceptable version to my understanding in the region I work in. There are my ways to do ours tasks.
Another great video! Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it! Thank you for sharing 🙏🏼🙏🏼
wonderful video! How to lift a person back?🙃
That is not a L1 rescue. But the awareness of a hauling system video should get you pointed in the right way.
your videos are all great. Just a thought. If you going to do a training program, maybe do it on a day when they are not people making a noise in the background. Like I said, the videos are amazing and very helpful but the noise in the background is distracting.
I am aware of that. Unfortunately I do not get to pick and choose when paying customers have the room. So sometimes I wait for the worst to be over and sometimes I cant because I have limited time.
Hi I'm which country is the training center??
Industrieel Klimmen is in the Netherlands