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Mr Gu should be showing soon!Yeah! Butt slappin!!! WHOOOOOO
This posts is exactly whats wrong with some of the discussions around here. People giving advise about things they know nothing about.
Have you actually ever work for a high ballin, high production logging outfit ,Treehumper, or did you just hear about it from your timber cruising friend? As someone who spent almost 14 years of his life doing just that, I can tell you we weren't removing dead bodies on a weekly basis. Pure Bullshit!
Was it your personal experience climbing hundreds of big conifers with a pair of spurs, a flip-line, and a climbing line hanging from your saddle that made you come to the conclusion it was an unsafe method, or was it something your instructor taught you in arborist school?
I would never think to tell one of the real-deal arborists around here how they should prune that beautiful heritage Oak or Maple tree.
Why? Because I don't know what the f***uck I'm taking about when it comes to pruning.
That ear protection is such a big deal. I went about 5 years without it on residential tree work, and I no longer have "great" hearing. It's not like I'm deaf, but I know that it was far better not to long ago.You do realized that my days as a production logger were from 1979 until the early 90's. What I do now is just my own, not so productive, small time local kill em', skid em', and mill em' operation.
No doubt a dangerous way to make a living but, but by your own numbers the deaths versus the thousands and thousand of workers hardly classifies as weekly bodybags flowing out of every outfit and camp in the country. Its an urban legend. As someone who was actually there, I can tell you it just didn't happen. Hell, most of the fellas I grew up with are still at it and by your account they should all be dead. How can that possible be?
Clearly you and I are never gonna agree on safety, and I'm good with that. I have and will always believe the single greatest safety tool is skill. In fact the only real injury I sustained in my life occurred while wearing a hardhat, chaps, eye protection, and ear protection. All that gear played are large roll in me being seriously hurt. Lucky for me a very wise old-timer took me under his wings and showed me a different way of staying alive. I have practiced what he preached for well over 30 years and what do ya' know. Alive, productive, and as pretty as ever!
I have not used ear protection for over 35 years (except when milling). My ears must be made out of old whale-bone, because I can hear just fine. What?That ear protection is such a big deal. I went about 5 years without it on residential tree work, and I no longer have "great" hearing. It's not like I'm deaf, but I know that it was far better not to long ago.
I've seen the size of the saws you use every day. I bet they're LOUD.
No doubt a dangerous way to make a living but, but by your own numbers the deaths versus the thousands and thousand of workers hardly classifies as weekly bodybags flowing out of every outfit and camp in the country. Its an urban legend. As someone who was actually there, I can tell you it just didn't happen. Hell, most of the fellas I grew up with are still at it and by your account they should all be dead. How can that possible be?
Yes, at that is the case in every industry and in every day activity that can kill you. It's not that it does every time and without fail but that it is a risk. It classifies as weekly body bags coming out of the woods in general, not, every camp or outfit in the country. Ask those people who counted the bodies if its an urban legend. They'll tell you because they were there that it happened. That's because they are seeing the whole of the industry vs. your very small corner of it.
How can it be possible that they are all dead? Because that's not how this works. Your small population of guys you grew up with isn't a sample size that is meaningful. That's the silo in which you live in. It makes the bigger picture invisible to you. That you were only injured once and that was when wearing PPE isn't even meaningful in the larger picture. Cause and effect. Maybe you thought that by wearing that stuff you're invincible but that's not how it works either.
End of the day, a person will find the evidence to support whatever they believe regardless of anything to the contrary. I choose to believe there are ways of doing my job profitably and reduce the risk. As well, that its an ongoing process.
Then please explain? I'm not clear on how all that gear played a significant role in your injury. I wondered out loud what the cause of the injury was and conjectured not an assumption and since this is an open dialog, left it for you to correct or clarify.Once again talking utter sh**t about something you know nothing about. Do you have any knowledge of the circumstances of the one and only substantial injury I have sustain in my career? No you don't, do ya? Doesn't stop you from making assumptions does it? I can assure you feeling invincible had nothing to do with it.
Like sand through the hourglass.Like something out of as a world turns....
and you just keep tuning in...Like something out of as a world turns....
Story of my life....Just browsing.....like being at a mall with no money on black friday........
I couldn't here him yelling, or the tree coming to get me because of the ear protection I was wearing. ( no saw running at the time).....
Down the road the road I go. The next season an amazing old time hook tender-took took me his wing and among other things taught me another way staying safe. Been practicing what he preached ever since. The best mentor in my life. Blessed.