Pike pole

The head of a pike pole with various implements for pulling items.
The head of a short, firefighter's pike pole

Pike poles are long metal-topped wood, aluminum, or fiberglass poles used for reaching, holding, or pulling. They are variously used in construction, logging, rescue & recovery, power line maintenance, and firefighting.[1]

Uses

Pike poles being used on a log drive
Pike pole heads of the type often used in river drives, these are displayed in the forestry museum Lusto in Punkaharju, Finland.

The pole's original use in the fire service was to pull down walls and neighboring buildings to stop a fire's spread. Modern firefighting pike poles are usually of fiberglass, 4–12' long, and used to search for fires hidden behind walls and ceilings, to pull items from intense heat and flames, and to ventilate structures by breaking windows. Also known as a ceiling hook of the day, the pike pole is the 'hook' referred to in 'hook and ladder' truck.[1]

In construction pike poles (pick pole, spike pole) are used to lift the sides of timber framed structures, as in barn raising and utility poles. In log driving they are called rafters' hooks and are used to maneuver floating logs.

In lumbering they are used to control logs floating on a river in a log drive and constructing log rafts. Pike poles used in log rafting were originally made of wood, typically spruce or fir. In the mid-1960s they began to be made of aluminum tubing plugged with a wooden knob to maintain buoyancy. Specialized logging tools of similar appearance are peavey and cant hook.

Pike poles are also used for rescue work to grab people or objects floating in high and rough waters.

Linemen use pike poles to maintain power lines. In the early days of line construction pike poles were used to stand up the utility poles.

The tool can also be used in salvage events in such things as constructing water chutes to displace water.

Pike pole fishing

The pike-pole ice fishing day on the Ural

In the past, pike poles were used for ice fishing, known as bagrenye ryby ( "fish pike-poling"; bagor means "pike pole" in Russian). A number of ethnographers note that this way was specific to the Ural River. When fish starts to hybernate, fisherman artels in large numbers put pike poles into ice holes in places known for big fish to crowd, so that a dense forest is made of pike poles. When drifting fish hits a pole, a fisherman feels this and pulls the catch out.[2]

The 1835 Russian Encyclopedic Lexicon describes a tradition of Ural Cossacks ice fishing for sturgeon. The pike-pole ice fishing of sturgeon was traditionally allowed some time after the Orthodox Christmas. On the day of bagrenye, the Cossacks would break the river ice at the known sturgeon hibernating locations, and pull out the disturbed fish with the pike poles. A successful Cossack would sometimes catch as many as 50 sturgeon. Occasionally a beluga was caught, and pulled out by a crowd. Only active-duty Cossacks were allowed to take part in this enterprise. [3]

Compare this with gaff fishing.

Pike poles in heraldry

In Heraldry pike poles are seen with all heraldry possible colors.

Weitere:[4]

See also

Notes

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pike pole.
Look up pike pole in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  1. 1 2 "Tools of the Trade: Firefighting Hand Tools and Their Use", PennWell Books, 1997, ISBN 0912212624, Chapter 5, "Poles"
  2. "Bagrenye ryby" in Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (Russian)
  3. ""Багренье" (Bagrenye, i.e. Pike-pole fishing)". Энциклопедический лексикон (Encyclopedic lexicon) (in Russian). vol. 4. Saint Petersburg. 1835. p. 65.
  4. Wappen, Flößermuseum Unterrodach
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