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Swedish soldiers to be trained in climbing trees

A Swedish airborne unit has decided to let soldiers take part in a course in advanced tree climbing, saying that the need to salvage unmanned drones from treetops requires them to be skilled climbers.

Swedish soldiers to be trained in climbing trees

”We have come to the conclusion that we have a responsibility as an employer. You don’t just send anyone up a tree. You want them to have the right equipment and knowledge, it is a question of personal safety,” Per Ingemarson, a spokesperson with the K3 airborne unit in Karlsborg in central Sweden, to daily Dagens Nyheter (DN).

As the unit operates the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) ”Falcon”, which is used among other places in Afghanistan, officials have decided to train some of the soldiers to scale a tree the right way, according to Ingemarson.

Sometimes these UAVs malfunction, either because they lose radio contact or due to a strong gust of wind, causing them to get stuck in the top branches of a tree.

When having to salvage a drone, it is crucial that the soldiers are properly skilled at climbing trees in a safe and secure manner, the regiment wrote in their request to Stockholm headquarters.

However, the need to climb a trees doesn’t actually occur that often, even while operating the drone aircraft.

Ingemarson is only aware of one instance in the last two years that a UAV has got caught in a tree out of hundreds of sorties, but he stressed that there may be more.

To begin with, three soldiers from the unit will undergo the advanced tree climbing training. The course will be conducted by military climbing experts, who usually teach soldiers how to scale rock walls safely.

”I can’t say that this is prioritized before other training, but I feel that it is a wise move. When people are injured everyone always says ‘Why didn’t you think of that before?’ In this case someone has been clever in advance,” said Ingemarson to DN.

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OFFBEAT

It’s legal to trim your neighbour’s tree (even if he doesn’t want you to), Germany’s highest court rules

The Federal High Court (BGH) is used to dealing with some of the most high-profile crimes in the country. But on Friday it announced its ruling on a rather different deliberation - whether it is permissible to trim branches hanging over into one's garden.

It’s legal to trim your neighbour's tree (even if he doesn't want you to), Germany’s highest court rules
A spruce tree. credit: dpa-tmn | Andrea Warnecke

In recent weeks the BGH has confirmed rulings against far-right terrorists, police killers and murderous businessmen. 

So the judges were no doubt happy for a bit of light relief when they were asked to deliberate a slightly less gruesome issue – whether the law allows one to cut back the branches of a neighbours tree that have grown over the fence.

This seemingly inconsequential matter of law made it all the way up to the highest court after a Berlin judge ruled in favour of the tree’s owner.

A Berlin man whose spruce tree had spread its branches into the neighbours garden filed a complaint when he saw that his neighbour had cut back the branches in his side of the fence.

The tree owner said that the action could have destabilized his tree and made it more vulnerable to being blown over by a storm. He even insisted that the pruning of its branches could lead the tree to die.

But on Friday the BGH ruled in favour of the tree pruner, saying he had a right to self-help which was provided for in the German Civil Code.

The judges emphasized that the right to self-help could be restricted by nature conservation regulations, such as tree protection statutes, but that these did not apply in this case.

SEE ALSO: The story of Germany’s oldest national park as it turns 50

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