dspacio
Branched out member
- Location
- Narragansett Bay
mark one for the near miss category;
a little oak tree is chunked down, 20' log standing, about 11" diameter.
guy makes a hinge, begins felling cut, wants me to push it over from above/behind in a bucket.
log begins falling normally, then abruptly swings 45 degrees to the right, bounces off the cage above bucket cab, and bounces back to strike the guy in the cheek.
luckily it didn't hit him anywhere to cause major damage other than likely, a big scar.
I am pretty sure one side of the hinge closed early and caused the tree to hook like that.
my takeaways: every fall, even the so-called tiny, are still big objects in tree work and deserve thorough attention, like cleaning out the notch.
I was kinda slowly shocked as it was happening and did not yell to get him out of the way sooner. I thought he was watching, then noticed he was looking at his cut, too late.
the biggest thing was that this guys back was hurting and was complaining a lot during the preceding weeks. it was getting more and more intense, creating a whole bad sensation around each job we did, that was growing.
there is more I could say but you have all seen and heard it, watch out when that anxious, painful energy is going around. I am grateful it wasn't a major injury and hope all of us there learn a bit from it.
I am beginning to understand when I smell an incident approaching. It's a hard thing for me to talk about with guys though, how to check their energy. It's a subtle and strange conversation but I have seen a lot of results now that make me take this serious.
a little oak tree is chunked down, 20' log standing, about 11" diameter.
guy makes a hinge, begins felling cut, wants me to push it over from above/behind in a bucket.
log begins falling normally, then abruptly swings 45 degrees to the right, bounces off the cage above bucket cab, and bounces back to strike the guy in the cheek.
luckily it didn't hit him anywhere to cause major damage other than likely, a big scar.
I am pretty sure one side of the hinge closed early and caused the tree to hook like that.
my takeaways: every fall, even the so-called tiny, are still big objects in tree work and deserve thorough attention, like cleaning out the notch.
I was kinda slowly shocked as it was happening and did not yell to get him out of the way sooner. I thought he was watching, then noticed he was looking at his cut, too late.
the biggest thing was that this guys back was hurting and was complaining a lot during the preceding weeks. it was getting more and more intense, creating a whole bad sensation around each job we did, that was growing.
there is more I could say but you have all seen and heard it, watch out when that anxious, painful energy is going around. I am grateful it wasn't a major injury and hope all of us there learn a bit from it.
I am beginning to understand when I smell an incident approaching. It's a hard thing for me to talk about with guys though, how to check their energy. It's a subtle and strange conversation but I have seen a lot of results now that make me take this serious.










