was a cone harvester until he fractured his spine last year. translation: the branch betrayed me and ifell. i grasped for another branch and that also broke and i fell about ten metres. i survived by the grace of god. i will never let my son be a tree climber. god willing he will never be so poor that he will be forced to climba poor that he will be forced to climb a tree to earn a living. elsewhere in the forest, harvesters working for another danish company, levinson, were not using safety rates decline. 0nly not using safety rates decline. only a harness at the top. the company says it is working on improving its safety standards. a decision has been made and we are introducing increased level
at a time. but thank you very much foryour insight. run at a time. but thank you very much for your insight. run out of time. it‘s that time of the year when millions of families gather around their christmas trees. in europe more than half the 80 million trees sold this year started out as seeds harvested from the forests of the republic of georgia. its nordmann firs are sought after for their aroma and their needles that don‘t drop off quickly. but the annual harvest is not for the faint hearted. the bbc‘s rayhan demytrie travelled to the alpine forests in western georgia to find out more. in the forests of western georgia is a job that requires a head for heights. and calculated risks. out of 80 million trees sold annually in europe, more than half begin theirjourney here. the seeds are harvested from nordmann fir cones in trees up to 50 metres tall. they will be grown in commercial
moment when you realised that? when i saw the glyph, i thought, well, my careerjust made a big turn. exactly! it s like, jackpot! estrada belli was lucky to find this freeze. the jungle doesn t make for especially easy archaeology. 100 years ago, an archaeologist from harvard first came to holmul and discovered these temples, but he missed the oldest carving which dates all the way back to 350 bc. the notes were rather incomplete because the archaeologist died shortly after working here, by a mysterious disease that he contracted here. he returned from here with a massive sore on his nose which never healed. that s what happens with this bug. eventually he died, he never finished his reports. it was actually published by one of his friends at harvard, posthumously. they forgot to mention this tunnel, and he had found
plantations in europe and sold as christmas trees in about 12 years‘ time. this man works for a danish company fair trees. its harvesters climb with safety ropes which takes time and patience. translation: i would not advise anyone to climb a tree without the right equipment because many people died, including my friend. my heart aches to think about it. safety is an important issue and companies operating here in the forests of racha are making sure that their pickers are well equipped and well trained to carry out what is quite a risky business. accidents can happen. this man was a cone harvester until he fractured his spine last year.
its harvesters climb with safety ropes which takes time and patience. translation: i would not advise anyone to climb a tree without the right equipment because many people died including my friend. my heart aches to think about it. safety is an important issue in companies operating here in the forests of racha are making sure that their pickers are well equipped and well trained to carry out what is quite a risky business. accidents can happen. this man was a cone harvester until he fractured his spine last year. translation: the branch betrayed me. and i fell. i grasped for another branch, it also broke and i fell about ten metres. i survived by the grace of god. i will never let my son