Moss, with you posting in the arborist forum that I'm "dissing" or here about axes to grind, I'd guess that readers would not be looking my way when the term "adversarial" writing is introduced.
There is more to this than just permits.
Part of the matter is politics and financing too.
Sillett probably would not be the first name to pick out of a hat to discuss this.
When I contacted him mentioning that two of his photos were probably taken from the same angle, and that an Atlas Grove tree in one image, and another identifiable item in another image were probably 1/2 mile from each other (max), he responded that Atlas Grove was nowhere near the other thing. But it was close - about 3000 feet.
Ever heard the term "core sample" used in reference to a business or operation before? That communication was a core sample. Likewise with the fact that he pulled the image off the internet about 30 minutes after I emailed about it, prior to the rest of that communication. He would be a secondary or later down the line contact.
Actually, I suspect that little will change about how ancient redwoods are climbed in the near 10 years. But it seemed appropriate to toss the idea out there. Then it opens the door for several people to consider. To not bring it up, would be selfish, retaining the idea to a limited opinion.
This is not really similar, but reminds me of when I expressed on my website that I did not agree with Preston about Michael Taylor discovering Atlas Grove. And Moss, wasn't for that _expression_ that you implied that I "dissed" Preston? This is interesting.
What I'd like people to realize here, is if I don't express what I am learning, folks like Moss don't make statements about me. But if I express facts about real experience, then their vocabulary changes.
Personally, I think when someone says I'm "adversarial" when they don't like me wpresenting a second opinion, I'd be wondering where the shoe really fits.
Moss, you don't understand why someone would write the actual facts on a webpage about an actual experience at a place, and how that experience compares to what someone wrote about it?
To other readers, regarding what Moss wrote here, and at other forums, I'd like to point out what some of you know, that Moss's illustrations were in the book The Wild Trees. And I'm assuming his business relationship and work were directly involved with Richard Preston. For some context, and your consideration.
Image: Groovy redwood next to Screaming Titans
