Healing nicely - Where did I go wrong?

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jotul8e2

Minister of Fire
Feb 2, 2008
595
Ozarks
Several months ago I decided to take down a dead hickory that promised fairly to become a hazard. It had died the year before, and I wanted to get it down before it became brittle. Not a large tree - maybe 16" diameter at 4', but still I looked up for potential widow-makers.

Not carefully enough apparently. Sometime during the process I was struck so hard that I thought I had been hit on the head. Once the mists cleared, I found that a limb about 2" at the butt had fallen 12 or 15 feet away, used the branches as a spring, and launched itself into my left chest, knocking me back several feet. I was wearing a heavy sweatshirt over a cotton work shirt over a t-shirt, and initial investigation showed the sweatshirt was fine - just some pieces of bark that brushed off. So I went back to work.

And worked a couple more hours. Split some of it, trimmed and cleaned up the small stuff, then went inside to clean up. I took off the sweatshirt and found my work and t-shirts in tatters, matted in blood, and three substantial puncture wounds; I have never been so surprised at anything in my life. None of ever hurt - not the injury, not the 27 stitches, not the healing. But that just sets up the question:

I have boots, gloves, hard hat, safety glasses, face shield, and chaps. None of those items were the least help. What would have helped, other than a bullet proof vest? Dead trees are always a risk, I've known that for decades, but could the risk been reduced in any way?
 
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Questionable trees I have a spotter looking up with a handful of my shirt ready to pull me out of the way.
Cutting the tree at waist height and looking up also limits potential man killers.
 
The only other thing that could have helped but is not always present, would have been another person watching out for you. Things just happen sometimes. I bet the hard hat saved you from something even worse.
 
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Hot dog! Every time you read a story like this it just reminds you the immense level of unpredictability involved with these tree thingys.
 
Yeah my neighbor and I used to team up on those. One cutting and the other looking up with his hand in the cutter's belt ready to pull and run.
 
Hot dog! Every time you read a story like this it just reminds you the immense level of unpredictability involved with these tree thingys.

For sure. Gooserider, a former mod here, is paralyzed from one of those incidents.
 
I don't think a bulletproof vest would have even helped there. They work on bullets, but knives are another story. I would imagine, beside the blunt force of the branch, the parts that caused the lacerations would be more like a knife.
 
Hmm, sobering stories and sorry to hear them. Was clearing brush and fallen branches today, cutting them up for use in my cast iron chiminea. Have a big hickory that has a broken hanging limb, still loosely attached about 30' up with lower branches stuck hard in the ground. Must be a 10-12" limb at the thickest and it's covered in vines. So I start cutting the free stuff, getting braver and braver or more accurately stupider and stupider. No way I'm cutting the branches under load but still there I was pulling on vines and hacking away, really not too smart.
 
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Dangerous stuff......

Really nothing you could have done would have protected you.

I will say that whenever something happens like that, I give myself a once over. Mostly because I have hurt myself before and didn't know it until much later. Lesson learned.
 
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Sometimes things happen so quick, there is no avoid them....just be as careful as you can
 
Chalk it up to a learning experience. I was cutting down a standing dead tree. No bark, limbs mostly gone. As it started to fall it swayed backwards. The top 1/3 of the tree snapped off one way. Whipping the bottom 2/3 the opposite way. It surprised me so much I had to throw my underwear away afterwards.
 
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