Please spare me the sermons...I already know what I did wrong and how lucky I was/am. I humbly share this humiliating story as a precautionary tale to my ol' pals & gals on OTT.
A while back when I was mowing, the parachute cord that held on my homemade canopy (PVC pipe and shade material) got caught in my un-guarded PTO shaft. Had the rope not broken and it pulled me back too far to reach the clutch and/or the key, I'd had no hope. I'm sure it would have pulled me into the PTO shaft completely. There was no other human around to help or even call for help. Even if there had been, it would have all happened to fast. Also, all of my PTO-driven attachments have PTO shafts...except this one. I had just purchased this basically new shaft off Craigslist ($95, woot!) and did not yet have a guard on it. I needed it for my flail mower so on it went and then off I went to get to work.
Here's a pic of the 'canopy.' It just happens to be reversed because I was using the backhoe in this pic. Obviously when I'm brush hogging the canopy is over the driver's seat.
As you can imagine, it wrapped up the cord in a blink and as a result it pulled the canopy down on my head, neck and shoulders in an instant. I jammed down on the clutch pedal to wind it down but that didn't even happen fast enough. Fortunately, the paracord broke. Does God keep an Old Timer pocket knife handy for reaching down out of Heaven at times like this!?
I got a good rope burn on my hands/wrist (guess I reached up quickly to grab the cord???), on my neck and on my right shoulder. In one of the pics you can see that the rope melted my shirt over the right shoulder. The neck and wrist have had some time to heal. I should have taken some more gory pics closer to the incident but you can sure see the location of that rope and how it looks like I tried to both slit my wrist and my jugular!
A while back when I was mowing, the parachute cord that held on my homemade canopy (PVC pipe and shade material) got caught in my un-guarded PTO shaft. Had the rope not broken and it pulled me back too far to reach the clutch and/or the key, I'd had no hope. I'm sure it would have pulled me into the PTO shaft completely. There was no other human around to help or even call for help. Even if there had been, it would have all happened to fast. Also, all of my PTO-driven attachments have PTO shafts...except this one. I had just purchased this basically new shaft off Craigslist ($95, woot!) and did not yet have a guard on it. I needed it for my flail mower so on it went and then off I went to get to work.
Here's a pic of the 'canopy.' It just happens to be reversed because I was using the backhoe in this pic. Obviously when I'm brush hogging the canopy is over the driver's seat.
As you can imagine, it wrapped up the cord in a blink and as a result it pulled the canopy down on my head, neck and shoulders in an instant. I jammed down on the clutch pedal to wind it down but that didn't even happen fast enough. Fortunately, the paracord broke. Does God keep an Old Timer pocket knife handy for reaching down out of Heaven at times like this!?
I got a good rope burn on my hands/wrist (guess I reached up quickly to grab the cord???), on my neck and on my right shoulder. In one of the pics you can see that the rope melted my shirt over the right shoulder. The neck and wrist have had some time to heal. I should have taken some more gory pics closer to the incident but you can sure see the location of that rope and how it looks like I tried to both slit my wrist and my jugular!