Any career that regularly involves creating escape routes has to be questioned.
I never thought about it that way. Most of the guys I was around took pride in their line of work, and looking for hazards was just part of it. Plus, elaborate escape routes were seldom made. Those were more for the campground hazard trees. Now second and third growth is cut and has less defect--rot in it. However, as a falling guru has said, the job is just as dangerous, if not more, because fallers actually spend more time at the base of the tree due to the quantity cut in a day. He said for that reason, he'd rather be cutting the large old growth here in the PNW.
Mechanized logging--processors and feller bunchers are used on the flatter ground and insurance fees are less when they are used. Some loggers even tether these to a stump and run them on steep ground but that is hard on the soils and, more importantly in this day and age, looks terrible.
I spent time down amongst the rigging crews in skyline yarded units. I always looked for a big stump or tree to dive behind if things went bad. I had to do that once but we were lucky and the skyline didn't break and snap. This was when a tree being cut during yarding--it had been damaged, went over backwards and hit the skyline.
Forestry work involves incurring "boo boos" and bruises. You work in all kinds of weather and different terrain. You learn to butt slide and use vegetation belays. We used to do fire hose belays to get down steep units while burning. (it's best to make sure the hose is hooked up to something substantial before doing that). It can be fun and it can be scary, but the "office" constantly changes. If you like routine, don't go into an outdoor line of work.
You keep on your toes and also rely on your coworkers to watch each other's backs. Unsafe workers are fired.
Note that he's got a nice tree to move behind right there. This was a beautiful place to be on such a nice day. The ground slope isn't horribly steep. It was a commercial thin unit and a yarder was being used. That's not me, I took the picture. This is in the southern, west side of the Warshington Cascade mountains.