Plan Accordingly!
Wednesday, September 14, 2022
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Plan Accordingly!
13. Clear your work area and your escape path of brush, vines, and other hazards that can trip you or catch your saw.
14. Escape from the bullseye when the tree tips. 90% of accidents happen within 12 feet of the stump. Go more than 15 feet, and stay out of the bullseye until things stop falling.
15. Keep spectators away more than twice the height of the tree in the direction it will fall.
16. Don't cut alone.
17. Keep your body and the swamper's out of the line of the bar in case of a kickback.
18. Set the brake when taking over two steps or when moving through tripping hazards. Keep your trigger finger off of the throttle when you are moving.
19. DO NOT operate a chainsaw from a ladder! Operating with your feet off the ground requires special training.
20. Do not cut above your shoulders.
21. Springpoles must be shaved on the inside of the apex between the ascending and descending sides. If the apex is higher than you shoulders, stand under the springpole and cut it low on the descending side. It will release upward, away from you.Leaning and heavily loaded poles that are too small to bore cut for a hinge should be shaved on the compressed side until they fold.
22. Do not cut a tree that is holding up a lodged tree. Do not work under a lodged tree. Think about a mouse trying to steal the cheese out of a trap.
23. Instruct your swampers and helpers to NEVER approach you from behind or the sides to within the reach of your saw when you are cutting. If you pull out of a cut with the chain running, or have a severe kickback, the swamper can be killed if he is coming up behind you!
24!! Quit When You Are Tired!
2 comments:
The culmination of identity politics is deep division.
Here's what that looks like; very few, if any, opportunities for reasonable debate by opposing sides. If one is not for, then they are against.
Since identity is personal, if one does not agree with the subject at hand, it follows that one must be against the person espousing that view. At the personal level, we call that hate, ergo one hates that person though they only disagree.
The divide may not be wide but it is deep. To perceive that it is narrow, one then reaches across. But the other conflates the two dimensions as one. The effort to commune is percieved as violence. The other then feels justified in their retaliation; after all, they think, they didn't start this.
I know of a family who abandoned their plan to renovate the ancestral family home in Asheville. The family had been there since soon after the Revolution. But because they follow Christ Jesus and are what are today known as traditional Americans, they were met with open hostility emanating from the homos and likeminded who have now occupied in great numbers that place. They are vicious (like everywhere else they gather) and they are numerous (Ibid). It is a crying disgrace. Perhaps the worst part is that behavior is encouraged.
Won't be surprised to see vigilantes rise again!
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