Just came across this...old, but important

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Bob Wulkowicz

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
May 28, 2001
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Location
Half Island Cove, Nova Scotia
INTRODUCTION

New Jersey FACE personnel were notified of this fatality by the county medical examiner on February 15, 1995. On February 28, 1995, FACE investigators visited the incident site and interviewed the company owner and one of the deceased's co-workers. Although the incident site had been altered (all the trees had been removed), FACE staff examined the site and compared it with photographs taken the day after the fatality by the employer. Additional information on the incident was gathered from the state police report and medical examiner's report.

The employer was a small tree trimming company that had been in business for 12 years and employed four workers at the time of the incident. The owner had 22 years of experience and trained the victim in tree trimming. The deceased was a 33 year-old climber and crew chief who had worked for the company since its inception. He was described by his employer and co-worker as a safe and careful worker.



INVESTIGATION

The incident occurred at the rear of a summer house located near a lake in a rural area. Several trees were on the property, including a red oak that was about 35 to 50 years old and approximately 50 feet tall. The tree had three large vertical limbs that grew vertically from the common trunk. Each of the limbs looked like a tree trunk. The tree grew with one limb in front and two behind and the limbs had been reinforced with 3/8 inch galvanized steel cables about twelve years prior to the incident. The braided steel cable was bolted to each of the three limbs and strung from one limb to another, forming an incomplete triangle, about 35 feet above the ground.

About two years prior to the incident, the home owner contacted the tree trimming company to remove the front vertical tree limb and top the other two. If the rear trees were found to be dead, they were to be removed also. When the home owner contracted for the tree removal, he requested that the job be done in the winter when the ground was frozen in order to prevent damage to the lawn when the pieces of cut tree struck the ground. The company owner estimated the job at the site, but was unable to do the work that winter due to severe weather. He again visited the site to check the job about four months before the incident.

The day of the incident, a Tuesday, was cold with temperatures below freezing. There was snow on the ground from a winter storm two weeks before. The three workers met at the company office and waited until 10 a.m., when the temperature rose to about 30 degrees. The crew consisted of a climber/crew chief (the victim), a full-time groundman, and a part-time groundman.

After arriving at the worksite, the victim struck the tree in several places with a spike to determine by sound if the tree was solid. His co-worker stated that they observed the tree and saw no holes, nests, hardware (other than the cables), unhealthy bark, or other signs of tree rot. The victim wore a climbing saddle and new climbing boots with spikes. He used a life line and two lanyards and had a chain saw with him. He climbed the front tree limb section (the one that was to be removed), tied off his safety lines and topped the vertical limb by cutting a 12 foot section that he dropped to the ground. The groundman cut that section into log size pieces that were solid, good wood.

The tree climber removed branches until he reached the cable that tied the trees together. His head was about level or slightly below the level that was cut. He placed his chainsaw on a belt hook and called down for a boltcutter, which was sent up by a groundman. The tree trimmer cut the cable and yelled "look out below!" The groundmen heard a cracking sound but initially couldn't tell where it was coming from. The sound was from the front vertical tree limb falling and breaking off at the base. It came down with the victim tied to it and struck a metal storage frame before hitting the ground. The witness stated that the limb bounced and struck the victim in the chest. One groundman stayed with the victim and shouted to the other to go for help. The worker left in his truck to find a pay phone. The groundman who stayed with the victim saw a neighbor and asked her to called 911. The police and emergency medical service arrived quickly but they were unable to resuscitate the victim who never regained consciousness. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

The tree fractured because the tree stump was rotted. The tree trimmers believed that trees usually rot from the top down and they were surprised to find rot in the trunk since the wood from the topping was strong and healthy. The tree limb broke off after losing the support of the steel cable. The company owner stated that the cable usually goes slack after the tree is topped and the branches are removed, indicating it is safe to cut. It is not known if the cable went slack.

The company owner called in another tree trimming company to finish the job. That company determined that the two remaining limbs were rotted; they hit the trees with a spike and it sunk into the bark. They used a come-along ( a hand-operated cable winch) to remove the rest of the tree. The employer felt that the back yard was too small and inaccessible to use a crane and there was insufficient area in which to drop the tree (cut it off at the base and let it fall). No other tree of sufficient size was nearby to use to tie into with a life line.



CAUSE OF DEATH

The county medical examiner determined the cause of death to be from multiple traumatic injuries.



RECOMMENDATIONS AND DISCUSSION

Recommendation # 1: Tree trimmers should be aware of alternate methods of safely removing hazardous trees.

Discussion: The presence of steel cables in the tree was a indication that the tree was unstable and had been cabled to prevent breakage. Other signs of concern that should be looked for are: signs of decay (trees can decay in any area from roots to crown), a hollow sound from rapping on the tree (though this may be less reliable when at the butt of the tree), cracks, root damage, dead wood in the crown, bark peeling or callous formation on the bark. The area at the base where the three limbs (resembling trunks) meet is often a weak point and a site of "butt rot." If one of the vertical limbs is weak, it should be assumed that all three of the limbs are weak.

An instrument available to arborists, for detecting tree rot, is an increment core. This is used to drill into the tree to extract a sample of the wood at the core of the tree. The wood core is visually inspected for damage. The increment core can be used only for trees which will be felled; it should not be used on healthy trees which need only to be trimmed.

Professional tree trimmers should be aware of alternate methods available to use to remove trees that are too hazardous to climb. Alternate methods include the use of cranes, tying in to nearby trees, or dropping the tree. In this situation, the company owner felt that none of these were feasible. The tree was later removed using a come-along. A method recommended by a NIOSH forester is:

Do all trimming of the tree with the cable intact. Take off the section above the cable. Decide where the next cut will be and insert an eye hook on each of the vertical limbs just below that point. Run a wire rope through the eye hooks to form a triangle. Use a come-along or chain stretcher to tighten the wire. This supports the limbs and affords stability of the tree so the next section and the cable can be cut. The trimmer should be tied off to a limb other than the one being cut.



Recommendation #2: Tree trimmers should be properly trained in identifying hazardous trees and in safely trimming or removing them.

Discussion: It is important that tree trimmers and tree trimming companies obtain correct information on safety regulations and methods of ensuring safe working conditions. Attendance at training and participation in professional organizations fosters improvement of skills and awareness of new equipment and trends in tree care and safety. Sources of information include:

The Committee for the Advancement of Arboriculture. This organization offers courses on basic and advanced tree climbing and other pertinent courses in tree safety and arboriculture. For information, contact David Shaw, Monmouth County Shade Tree Commission, P.O. Box 1255, Freehold, NJ 07728-1255. The telephone number is (908) 431-7903.


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Bob Wulkowicz
 
Heebie Jeebies.

Live oaks down here have a tendency to host a butt-rot fungus that pretty much cores the heartwood to an average of 30%.

Balance in growth can alter a survey suggesting the tree's sound and solid - most of my removals indicate a severe loss in trunk integrity due to the absense of core solids. This rot may leave spongy tissue but most old injuries allow a portal for insect and various other parasitic feeders - bees included that further weaken the tree mass. Bark can and often "heals" old injuries making determination of safety difficult - nothing to see or feel. Thumping is a way most marine surveyors sniff-out unseen rot, I carry a 15lb wooden mallet to be sure. Listen. It's been a trip to have a customer watch the use of a stethescope at times.

Sit and speculate a while before giving that bid or fueling-up and getting started. Look, feel, listen, and think.

That climber/foreman died a horrible death. He wasn't a greenhorn.
 
Sounds like one of the scenarios that Joe Bones from Bartlett gives in his travels. I think they were called in to consult on the accident.
 
Tragic. Seems like most all of the accidents are failure of tree or failure of method. Still haven't seen one that was failure of biner where 22k biner failed and 1k would have saved a life...........makes ya think when people are arguing about the minutia of cert requirements.

Nate
 
The more you learn, the more you realize you don't know. It is handy to think of the species failure profile for any tree that you work in. You need to know not just how the tree grows, but how it may fail too (well at least the most likely way for that species). Root or butt rot is common in an oak and is often the least visible structural problem. A little thought to the force impact not just from support systems but also the rigging you utilize too. Like I said the more I learn, the more I wonder why I still climb trees... oh wait, there is that view from the office...plus I always speak kindly to them and ask that they not hurt me.

Paul :)
 
Paul's note about knowing how trees fail is a good one. The recent attention given to biomechanics is very useful to look at. To understand the fungal enemies we deal with every day, see Fungal Strategies of Wood Decay in Trees.

the author Schwarze will be presenting at ISA this year. Wish I could go.
 
Hope i can go, finances are not looking good enough far this year.

I'll have to try to rent a condo and have several people room in for a proffit.
 

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