VEVOR Ninja Tree Climbing Kit, 20 Rock Climbing Holds & 6 Ratchets, Large Climbing Rocks for Kids & Adults Outdoor Backyard Ninja Tree Obstacle Course Training
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VEVOR Ninja Tree Climbing Kit, 20 Rock Climbing Holds & 6 Ratchets, Large Climbing Rocks for Kids & Adults Outdoor Backyard Ninja Tree Obstacle Course Training
Model: VEVOR Ninja Tree Climbing Kit, 20 Rock Climbing Holds & 6 Ratchets, Large Climbing Rocks for Kids & Adults Outdoor Backyard Ninja Tree Obstacle Course Training
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What, no safety harness or helmet for the kid??? Are they insane? What about gloves to protect his little hands and shin and knee pads.
We used to say, if you can't figure out how to get up in the tree by yourself, you probably shouldn't BE in the tree, by yourself.
This kit is incomplete and I think that's because including proper safety harness will increase the price 10x.
Don't buy this unless you already have the proper safety harness (and those are pretty expensive)
From a rock climbing perspective, you generally only use ropes and harnesses above 10 feet. Anything less, you're taking a ground fall since there has to be slack in the rope in order for you to be able to move. Since the kit only includes 6 straps, you're not getting much more than 6 feet off the ground. If they're big enough to use these, they're big enough to take that fall. And if they're small enough for that to be a fall, they're small enough to bounce.
From a rock climbing perspective, you generally only use ropes and harnesses above 10 feet. Anything less, you're taking a ground fall since there has to be slack in the rope in order for you to be able to move
I have no idea or interest in rock climbing so I trust what you're saying is right, but because I'm cheap, I trim and cut my own oak and pine trees, one of which is 60' tall but most are in the 20 ft range.
When I jump from one branch to another I have enough slack in my rope but it's tensioned in such a way that I cannot fall more than 2' from the ground even when the rope is under full tension. For the cheap rope and cheap arrestor I use, that's a 8' to 2' specification. The ones with a tighter range were magnitudes more expensive. I did a test fall and it worked as specified (cheap arrestor is single use so I had to buy another one) but I've never actually fallen to do a real life test nor do I hope to.
Personally I'm comfortable jumping from 4' off the ground. Anything higher and I risk a slip because I have not trained how to fall from a higher distance. I believe you need a special technique to fall from 6' or higher that needs to involve a drop and roll to redirect the impact
That said even for children, a 6' fall sounds dangerous but I will let real parents decide for themselves.
I have no idea or interest in rock climbing so I trust what you're saying is right, but because I'm cheap, I trim and cut my own oak and pine trees, one of which is 60' tall but most are in the 20 ft range.
When I jump from one branch to another I have enough slack in my rope but it's tensioned in such a way that I cannot fall more than 2' from the ground even when the rope is under full tension. For the cheap rope and cheap arrestor I use, that's a 8' to 2' specification. The ones with a tighter range were magnitudes more expensive. I did a test fall and it worked as specified (cheap arrestor is single use so I had to buy another one) but I've never actually fallen to do a real life test nor do I hope to.
Personally I'm comfortable jumping from 4' off the ground. Anything higher and I risk a slip because I have not trained how to fall from a higher distance. I believe you need a special technique to fall from 6' or higher that needs to involve a drop and roll to redirect the impact
That said even for children, a 6' fall sounds dangerous but I will let real parents decide for themselves.
I apologize if I caused any duress. I was being facetious and maybe should throttle back a bit. I just found considerable humor in putting giant belts on a tree when we played with trash cans and dirt as children.
I apologize if I caused any duress. I was being facetious and maybe should throttle back a bit. I just found considerable humor in putting giant belts on a tree when we played with trash cans and dirt as children.
Truth be told, with that insight, your post is now hilarious.
You needed to leave a tiny bit of hint that there was some mischief in your comment and we would all have had a jolly time.
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We used to say, if you can't figure out how to get up in the tree by yourself, you probably shouldn't BE in the tree, by yourself.
Don't buy this unless you already have the proper safety harness (and those are pretty expensive)
https://intellectualtak
Don't buy this unless you already have the proper safety harness (and those are pretty expensive)
When I jump from one branch to another I have enough slack in my rope but it's tensioned in such a way that I cannot fall more than 2' from the ground even when the rope is under full tension. For the cheap rope and cheap arrestor I use, that's a 8' to 2' specification. The ones with a tighter range were magnitudes more expensive. I did a test fall and it worked as specified (cheap arrestor is single use so I had to buy another one) but I've never actually fallen to do a real life test nor do I hope to.
Personally I'm comfortable jumping from 4' off the ground. Anything higher and I risk a slip because I have not trained how to fall from a higher distance. I believe you need a special technique to fall from 6' or higher that needs to involve a drop and roll to redirect the impact
That said even for children, a 6' fall sounds dangerous but I will let real parents decide for themselves.
I have no idea or interest in rock climbing so I trust what you're saying is right, but because I'm cheap, I trim and cut my own oak and pine trees, one of which is 60' tall but most are in the 20 ft range.
When I jump from one branch to another I have enough slack in my rope but it's tensioned in such a way that I cannot fall more than 2' from the ground even when the rope is under full tension. For the cheap rope and cheap arrestor I use, that's a 8' to 2' specification. The ones with a tighter range were magnitudes more expensive. I did a test fall and it worked as specified (cheap arrestor is single use so I had to buy another one) but I've never actually fallen to do a real life test nor do I hope to.
Personally I'm comfortable jumping from 4' off the ground. Anything higher and I risk a slip because I have not trained how to fall from a higher distance. I believe you need a special technique to fall from 6' or higher that needs to involve a drop and roll to redirect the impact
That said even for children, a 6' fall sounds dangerous but I will let real parents decide for themselves.
You needed to leave a tiny bit of hint that there was some mischief in your comment and we would all have had a jolly time.
Leave a Comment