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Tree Care Forums
Arboricultural Injuries and Fatalities
Elbow and wrist soreness
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<blockquote data-quote="gitrdun_climbr" data-source="post: 573651" data-attributes="member: 8589"><p><strong>that IS tennis elbow</strong></p><p></p><p>Bummer you might quit this awesome line of work just to try to get rid of it...you'll likely find almost any line of work can irritate it as well though; I know a mailman who had a SEVERE case and another who is a server.</p><p></p><p>Don't get me wrong, we all one-hand from time to time but it's probably a good idea to eliminate that as a regular, every-branch, practice for more reasons than just tennis elbow. On those branches too small to rig I have great success with the snap cut...two hands on saw...then two hands on branch.</p><p></p><p>I'll step off my physical therapy soap box after this comment: it really works on severe tennis elbow.</p><p></p><p>Take care!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gitrdun_climbr, post: 573651, member: 8589"] [b]that IS tennis elbow[/b] Bummer you might quit this awesome line of work just to try to get rid of it...you'll likely find almost any line of work can irritate it as well though; I know a mailman who had a SEVERE case and another who is a server. Don't get me wrong, we all one-hand from time to time but it's probably a good idea to eliminate that as a regular, every-branch, practice for more reasons than just tennis elbow. On those branches too small to rig I have great success with the snap cut...two hands on saw...then two hands on branch. I'll step off my physical therapy soap box after this comment: it really works on severe tennis elbow. Take care! [/QUOTE]
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