I was cutting up a BIG honey locust (28" DBH). I was cutting one of the larger limbs off, it was about 12" diameter. I was cutting fast, not really paying too much attention (that would be the mistake) and I didn't fully survey how this limb was going to fall. My plan was to just cut it enough so that it bent towards the ground, and then cut it up while it was still attached to the tree. It had a big bend in the middle. As I was cutting through it (on the uphill side), it went down to the ground all at once, the bend hit the ground and acted as a fulcrum, the weight out beyond the fulcrum was enough that it sheared what was left of my hinge wood, and the limb came right at me. I would say at it's highest point it was about chest height. I tried to jump back out of the way, but seeing as I was cutting on the uphill side (pretty steep hill right behind me) I couldn't do a whole lot. The limb hit me pretty hard right in the side of my left knee, then the end landed on my right foot, just high enough that the steel toes didn't do squat. I thought my foot was broken, I couldn't feel it, then the throbbing came, and then it all went away. I went back to cutting and was fine the rest of the day (even loading the big stuff I didn't have any aches or pains in the effected areas).
When I got home, my foot was throbbing and it hurt to take my boot off, maybe it's just because at that point it had rested some, and then putting it back to work again hurt. What really surprised me was the side of my knee, when it happened it really didn't hurt much, and I thought that the limb had just grazed the side of it. I've got a huge (almost baseball sized) bump/bruise there. No pain in my knee so I don't think it did damage to the joint, just popped me hard enough to give me a bump and bruise.
I feel very lucky, had I not been able to jump as far as I did I likely would have ended up with at least 1 broken leg.
Lesson learned, ALWAYS, survey exactly what you think is going to happen when you cut something. I got in a hurry and just glanced at the limb and didn't really think it out and didn't realize that the bend was going to act like a fulcrum and break the hinge, I just thought it would rest nicely on the ground.
When I got home, my foot was throbbing and it hurt to take my boot off, maybe it's just because at that point it had rested some, and then putting it back to work again hurt. What really surprised me was the side of my knee, when it happened it really didn't hurt much, and I thought that the limb had just grazed the side of it. I've got a huge (almost baseball sized) bump/bruise there. No pain in my knee so I don't think it did damage to the joint, just popped me hard enough to give me a bump and bruise.
I feel very lucky, had I not been able to jump as far as I did I likely would have ended up with at least 1 broken leg.
Lesson learned, ALWAYS, survey exactly what you think is going to happen when you cut something. I got in a hurry and just glanced at the limb and didn't really think it out and didn't realize that the bend was going to act like a fulcrum and break the hinge, I just thought it would rest nicely on the ground.