retiree-urgency abandoned
Member
Equipment
B3350, Kub. 5" rotary cutter, LP 48" forks, Titan Aerial Platform, KK XB Dump
Since there isn't a forum for "Dumb Stuff I Shouldn't Have Done (OTT Confessions)", I'm posting mine here.
Last week I let my undeserved sense of self-confidence get the better of me. Had a few free hours in the morning before the dew burned off the grass enough to mow, so I checked the to-do list and decided to remove a few good-sized limbs from a tree near the barn. My wife wanted our tree guy to do it, but I told her I could do it myself - WRONG!
The ladder was a little short for where I needed to be to cut the limbs so I climbed up a few crotches to where I wanted to be. Dropped the first limb - no problem. Dropped the second limb and then realized that my boot was stuck in the tree crotch. Extracted my boot, and in maneuvering to get down to the ladder, started to lose my footing. Tossed the chain saw into a bush so I'd have both hands free, but then managed to lose my grip on the tree and then lost my tenuous footing. Without any time for a pucker, I fell backward 15 feet to the ground.
As I was falling, my shoulder clipped one of the big limbs on the ground and I dislocated my shoulder. Fortunately, we had someone working here that day who saw me go down - he and my wife got my arm slinged, loaded me into the car and got me to the ER where they were able to do a non-surgical "reduction" to get the shoulder back in place. Needless to say, it will be a while before I get to that mowing.
I've got pretty incredible good luck, but after this misadventure, I'm taking it as a sign from the universe (and a deserved "I told you so" from my wife) to dial it down and avoid unnecessary risks. Limbing that tree wasn't an emergency, paying to have it done by a pro wasn't an issue - it was just me being a bonehead. Considering that I could have landed on a metal t-post of the fence below or landed with my back across that big downed limb - I got off easy and probably deserved everything I got.
So work smart, accept your limitations and be safe!
Last week I let my undeserved sense of self-confidence get the better of me. Had a few free hours in the morning before the dew burned off the grass enough to mow, so I checked the to-do list and decided to remove a few good-sized limbs from a tree near the barn. My wife wanted our tree guy to do it, but I told her I could do it myself - WRONG!
The ladder was a little short for where I needed to be to cut the limbs so I climbed up a few crotches to where I wanted to be. Dropped the first limb - no problem. Dropped the second limb and then realized that my boot was stuck in the tree crotch. Extracted my boot, and in maneuvering to get down to the ladder, started to lose my footing. Tossed the chain saw into a bush so I'd have both hands free, but then managed to lose my grip on the tree and then lost my tenuous footing. Without any time for a pucker, I fell backward 15 feet to the ground.
As I was falling, my shoulder clipped one of the big limbs on the ground and I dislocated my shoulder. Fortunately, we had someone working here that day who saw me go down - he and my wife got my arm slinged, loaded me into the car and got me to the ER where they were able to do a non-surgical "reduction" to get the shoulder back in place. Needless to say, it will be a while before I get to that mowing.
I've got pretty incredible good luck, but after this misadventure, I'm taking it as a sign from the universe (and a deserved "I told you so" from my wife) to dial it down and avoid unnecessary risks. Limbing that tree wasn't an emergency, paying to have it done by a pro wasn't an issue - it was just me being a bonehead. Considering that I could have landed on a metal t-post of the fence below or landed with my back across that big downed limb - I got off easy and probably deserved everything I got.
So work smart, accept your limitations and be safe!