MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 66,283
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
The main problem I have is that the strings of lights are not heavy duty enough to support their own weight. At that distance, they can and will pull wires out of their sockets, and if there is the slightest of wind, it's all over.Very ingenious.
I knew you had a cheaper way to do it. It looks like it works good.
I may copy your idea one day, if I ever get enough time to do it. I have a few good trees that this would work good on.
So, I stretch the 300' strings out in my driveway and wrap them with twine from end to end, then go back and electrical tape them every 4-5'.
Then I'll pull a 300' strand into three peaks, giving me 6 - 50' long legs. I take a 6' long piece of rope, tie a figure 8 loop in the middle, and tape each 3' leg down the sides of each peak.
Shoot the 50# test fishing line over the tree, remove the arrow, tie on a 100' rope to the fishing line and one of the loops on a peak, and pull it up to the top, stopping every once in a while to keep the legs spread out.
I've had mixed results with the durability of the lights VS the weather. Some years nothing happens to them, I can pull them down pretty easy, and reuse them. Other years, I've had the wind destroy them the 2nd day they were up.
Last year I got them up, then had back surgery in early January, so they didn't come down until august, and by that time destroyed, so I had to do three new strands this year, and that's why it took 6 hours of prep, getting the twine on them and all. It only takes me about 3-4 hours to actually get them up on the tree.
Wrapping with twine.

Ready to go for the next day.
