strongback
ArboristSite Operative
I think it fair to assume that most of t he posters here are accustomed to doing manual labor in often inhospitable weather and taking the necessary health and safety precautions. However, we may -as I did recently- find ourselves working in the company of the uninitiated/out of shape due to helping a neighbor or just gathering firewood with a less experienced friend. When this situation occurs it's important to make sure that the less experienced participant is taking the same safety precautions as are you.
Case in point: After having a load wood dropped at my house by a tree service, and grossly underestimating how many stacked cords it would be once processed, I invited my co-worker/neighbor to come over and partake of the bounty.
It wasn't his first time cutting firewood but it had been a long time since he had. The temps were around the 90* mark. I was sucking down water and he wasn't. I'm 34 and he's 55+. I am accustomed to physically demanding outdoor work in all temperatures and he, is not. After delivering the second truckload of wood to his house (probably <3 hours of work) I was ready to go back for the next load, he, was not. He was very near heat exhaustion after unloading the truck.
In hindsight, I should have insisted that if he were going to work with me that he take the same health/safety precautions as I do. With his being 20plus years older than I am, I wasn't comfortable with taking a more stern approach. Luckily, he only paid for my reluctance with a bit of a dizzy spell and the embarrassment of breaking down in front of his wife, but we all know it could have been worse. I'm just thankful that he didn't get injured or injure me because his faint spell could just as easily come at a time when I was vulnerable.
I know it's not as dramatic as many threads here but I'm grateful to have my conscience spared the pain of having done harm to someone through neglect and hoping to pass along a lesson learned to others.
Case in point: After having a load wood dropped at my house by a tree service, and grossly underestimating how many stacked cords it would be once processed, I invited my co-worker/neighbor to come over and partake of the bounty.
It wasn't his first time cutting firewood but it had been a long time since he had. The temps were around the 90* mark. I was sucking down water and he wasn't. I'm 34 and he's 55+. I am accustomed to physically demanding outdoor work in all temperatures and he, is not. After delivering the second truckload of wood to his house (probably <3 hours of work) I was ready to go back for the next load, he, was not. He was very near heat exhaustion after unloading the truck.
In hindsight, I should have insisted that if he were going to work with me that he take the same health/safety precautions as I do. With his being 20plus years older than I am, I wasn't comfortable with taking a more stern approach. Luckily, he only paid for my reluctance with a bit of a dizzy spell and the embarrassment of breaking down in front of his wife, but we all know it could have been worse. I'm just thankful that he didn't get injured or injure me because his faint spell could just as easily come at a time when I was vulnerable.
I know it's not as dramatic as many threads here but I'm grateful to have my conscience spared the pain of having done harm to someone through neglect and hoping to pass along a lesson learned to others.