Seeing Scotty topping the trees at the scout camp made me think of these pictures.
You were right Scotty, it was hard work. There were no fat loggers in any early pictures.
In these early logging shows, the high rigger was the most valued worker and a good cook often was second.
The block that the rigger was standing on weighed around a ton! [A high rigger tops a Douglas fir to use as a spar tree at Abernethy & Lougheed's Camp 3 on Alouette Lake, 1926 (VP 1488)]
This is something that I have only seen in pictures. By the time I started in the woods, the portable steel spars trees had taken over. [Rigging a spar tree for a skyline show at victoria Lumber & Manufacturing in 1940. (Jack Cash photo, UBC BC 1930/549/65VL4003)]
Many of these logging techniques were also in use in Washington and Oregon states. [A wooden skyline spar at a Victoria Lumber company show near Chemainus in the 1940s. A MacLean boom is being used to load the cars. (Jack Cash photo, UBC BC 1930/547)]
Pictures taken from Whistle Punks & Widow-Makers by Robert Swanson.
You were right Scotty, it was hard work. There were no fat loggers in any early pictures.
In these early logging shows, the high rigger was the most valued worker and a good cook often was second.
The block that the rigger was standing on weighed around a ton! [A high rigger tops a Douglas fir to use as a spar tree at Abernethy & Lougheed's Camp 3 on Alouette Lake, 1926 (VP 1488)]
This is something that I have only seen in pictures. By the time I started in the woods, the portable steel spars trees had taken over. [Rigging a spar tree for a skyline show at victoria Lumber & Manufacturing in 1940. (Jack Cash photo, UBC BC 1930/549/65VL4003)]
Many of these logging techniques were also in use in Washington and Oregon states. [A wooden skyline spar at a Victoria Lumber company show near Chemainus in the 1940s. A MacLean boom is being used to load the cars. (Jack Cash photo, UBC BC 1930/547)]
Pictures taken from Whistle Punks & Widow-Makers by Robert Swanson.