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I was going to include this in my last post but that one was getting sort of long and I felt like there was enough information about this that it deserved its own posting. Here are some tips for keeping up on the maintenance in between your annual challenge course inspection by a qualified challenge course professional.
In addition to the annual inspection, programs should conduct their own inspections on a regular basis. In this instance regular means two things, seasonal and daily.
Seasonal inspections or those done as conditions may dictate due to weather (on outdoor courses), high volume of use, etc. should be assigned to your course manager or some staff person who is familiar with the course construction. Many things can occur that can alter the condition of the course between annual inspection dates. Other daily inspections are the responsibility of all staff utilizing the course. It is recommended that you have a means for communicating any problems with the course to all staff whether they are in-house full-time people or adjunct staff who use the course occasionally. At High 5 we use emails and a white board posted in our equipment shed. Issues and concerns can be readily posted for the next facilitator to see before the next program begins.
Wow, that is a lot of stuff to look at and pay attention to. There is even more but if you get nothing else from this post... be mindful of the equipment you handle on a daily basis. It is so easy to go into auto pilot and mindlessly hang ropes and attach carabiners. Notice the carabiners operation and wear points, inspect ropes every time you hang them and pay attention, period. (was that period redundant)
Chris Ortiz
Chris:
These blog posts are great- keep them coming! I plan to have my staff read them, too.
Once again Chris, you've done the industry well, very. It's too easy to get complacent with our daily routine of pulling off meaningful facilitation and one of the most important tools of our trade -the rope challenge course and associated low elements-is taken granted for. Hey, it's up, it's being used so it must be in good shape right? In this case false is the correct answer-again. We just recently completed some in-house rescue training and part of this years training was some "off site observation" of OPE (other peoples equipment). While the training was successful, I'd be less than truthful if I said there were no concerns about the overall condition of the course. Suffice it to say that the devil is in the details and a courses' condition fits the "first impression" rule. Right, wrong or indifferent it is what it is.
In any event, thanks again Chris for your insight. Your advice is greatly appreciated!