I share my recent accident to help others realize how this can happen. I've worked in many dangerous positions over the years, construction, factories, auto shops, torches, welders, equipment and so on. I'm pretty smart and good at everything I put my mind to, I've never been hurt or had an accident, so I pretty much thought I was too smart or good to get hurt. That's a huge problem.
I was doing a small clean up job with a chain saw for extra money. I'd been working full time, and taking on whatever work I could to make ends meet, with the midwest storms there was lots of trees down. To this day I don't know exactly what happened. I cut down a very small diameter tree, stepped back, and I think I tripped on another small log, lost my grip as the saw was on decel, and it got my left knee. It was so fast, and such an accident I really don't know exactly how it happened, I'm assuming I lost my grip with my left hand as I stumbled maybe, but really not sure.
I was not wearing chaps, only safety glasses. I was very fortunate the saw was on decel, but I felt a weird thug and tug as it ripped into my knee. In a split second, it tore into my knee. Really not much pain considering what just happened, some blood but not a ton, I considered continuing working. Maybe I was in shock, or it was just numb. But I could see fleshy stuff, and realized this jagged rip on my knee probably won't heel well. I went to the ER, and got 12 stitches, 5 deep, and 7 on top. I got off very lucky. Couldn't move my knee for a day in a brace, that was the worst part. I'm 100% healed, other than tender scar tissue for a while. This was a few months ago.
I immediately went out and got the proper ppg (personal protective gear) that any saw operator should be using. Had I been wearing chaps, I would've needed a bandaid maybe. Instead of costly ER visit.
Moral here is, accidents are accidents. I was also very fatigued. I had zero accidents or injuries in over 30 years, thought I was too good for that. It can and will happen. Use proper safety equipment, don't operate a chainsaw fatigued, don't think you're too smart or good to get hurt.
I read a lot of chainsaw accident stories since, maybe, had I read them first, I would've at least worn the chaps.
I was doing a small clean up job with a chain saw for extra money. I'd been working full time, and taking on whatever work I could to make ends meet, with the midwest storms there was lots of trees down. To this day I don't know exactly what happened. I cut down a very small diameter tree, stepped back, and I think I tripped on another small log, lost my grip as the saw was on decel, and it got my left knee. It was so fast, and such an accident I really don't know exactly how it happened, I'm assuming I lost my grip with my left hand as I stumbled maybe, but really not sure.
I was not wearing chaps, only safety glasses. I was very fortunate the saw was on decel, but I felt a weird thug and tug as it ripped into my knee. In a split second, it tore into my knee. Really not much pain considering what just happened, some blood but not a ton, I considered continuing working. Maybe I was in shock, or it was just numb. But I could see fleshy stuff, and realized this jagged rip on my knee probably won't heel well. I went to the ER, and got 12 stitches, 5 deep, and 7 on top. I got off very lucky. Couldn't move my knee for a day in a brace, that was the worst part. I'm 100% healed, other than tender scar tissue for a while. This was a few months ago.
I immediately went out and got the proper ppg (personal protective gear) that any saw operator should be using. Had I been wearing chaps, I would've needed a bandaid maybe. Instead of costly ER visit.
Moral here is, accidents are accidents. I was also very fatigued. I had zero accidents or injuries in over 30 years, thought I was too good for that. It can and will happen. Use proper safety equipment, don't operate a chainsaw fatigued, don't think you're too smart or good to get hurt.
I read a lot of chainsaw accident stories since, maybe, had I read them first, I would've at least worn the chaps.
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