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View Full Version : Treestand hunters gotta read this




glockman55
09-27-2006, 05:08 PM
Treestand hunters gotta read this.
I'm actually borrowing this from another forum, but man you gotta understand the issues. I know this was a gun hunter, but that doesn't really matter here.


This was posted on another forum and I thought it was so relevant that I bring it here.

THE BEST BEAR HUNTING STORY OF 2006

The bait had been hit 14 days in a row and the shirt placed over the bait the night before was successful at keeping the big bear away at night. The shirt was removed and a pail of dog food and molasses was placed beside the bait for fresh scent long with vanilla extract sprayed all over. SET!!
With the 270WSM unloaded and a new found sense of success in mind, up the tree I went. The stand was a hardwood skid with eye bolts that the straps were attached to which went around the tree. I stood on the skid, loaded the gun and began to adjust the chair for a 4 hour sit before dusk, and then it happened!!! Never did I expect that my adventure was about to begin with such urgency and a life and death struggle, not for the bear but for me.
CRACK, I was looking at the sky and the tops of the trees with my arms flailing and I am sure I was yelling. AHHHH… THUD. Can I move? Yes but the pain. I have tunnel vision….I’m blacking out and I can’t breath!! Oh God NO..pain…I can’t breathe. When will they find me here and in what shape?? I can’t breath and can hardly move. 1/16 breaths now but with every 16th breathe an agonizing grown follows….I’m blacking out again…..I have to get outa here and get help…NOW!! I have to!! With everything I had left and I mean everything I unloaded the gun and left it there along with everything else except the ammunition. I staggered back to the bike 200yds away and drove it 3km back to the in-laws house just staying conscious enough to get enough oxygen into my lungs and make it back to their house (alive)! At times I could not get a breath when I needed to because of the pain and having to will the air into my lungs. But… I made it.
My brother-in-law called the ambulance as I was going into shock with puddles of sweat all around me. The trip to the hospital took half an hour but it seemed longer. After being emitted and 6 injections of morphine and a shot of something real good, the pain was down to where I could get ¼ breaths of oxygen. I could not lay flat and had to sit up, which was the only way for me to get oxygen into my lung. Yes lung…. One of my lungs had collapsed and two of my vertebra were compressed (I did an accordion job on my back). VERY VERY PAINFUL! For one day I was on 10mg shot of morphine every 2-4 hours and a slow release tablet of morphine. Along with that was oxycoton, muscle relaxers, gravol to keep it all down and a host of other strong medication.
Five days later a person who was in good shape and only required the occasional Advil has a pharmacy of pain killers, puffers and anti-inflammatory medication on the counter. It is a miracle I had no major broken bones (I still question the CT scan) and with one minor operation to inset a chest tube to repair my collapsed lung….I am way past being lucky.
This is not meant to be a pity for me at all, it is the only way I know to get your attention and try to get other to see how fast it can happen. It may be a homemade stand or a $500.00 deluxe model it doesn’t matter… if you are going to fall it will happen, you will hit the ground, and you have really no choice how you land or how fast you descend. We are all 10 foot tall and bullet proof sitting in our tree stand hunting for the next best story to tell until it happens to you and all you have left is a feeling of excruciating pain and dependency on everyone around you as though you were a child again. So many questions run though your mind, and the one that appears most unsettling is: WILL I MAKE IT OR NOT. It was luck or Gods hand that I did!
4 weeks off work minimum, no shouting or hunting and I almost made my wife a widow before we were even married. Is a harness worth it? You can bet your life on it!


Later, he posted this:

Just read the official report from the doc,,, Off for 6 weeks with a fractured rib, compression fracture to vertebrae, internal rib bruising and suffered a collapsed lung. Now we are pushing into moose hunting season. My fiance is stressed out. I'm sorry dear !
__________________
Email: safetreehunt@yahoo.com (safetreehunt@yahoo.com)

One last bit of advice: Never fall out of a tree!!

Find out more on how to Hunt Safe and download your free instructions on the climber systems here: http://www.geocities.com/safetreehunt/index.html (http://www.geocities.com/safetreehunt/index.html)




The Nailer
09-27-2006, 05:34 PM
glockman55-

Thank you for reminding everyone once again that thinks it cannot happen to them.

The timing is perfect!

For God's sake people tie off and be safe this year. Your family and friends rely and depend on you.

Kelly Johnson
09-27-2006, 06:41 PM
I love me way to much not to use one.

jakeo
09-27-2006, 08:50 PM
Thank you for the heads up!

john warren
09-28-2006, 11:41 AM
hmmm as i've said many times,,, a tree is no place for my 55 yo butt. i'll remember to hunt from a ground blind.

Sib
09-28-2006, 11:49 AM
Who would have thought that an old skid used as a treestand might break? :tdo12: Yeah, use a safety harness and also use your brain. This treestand was an accident waiting to happen.

Backwoods-Savage
09-28-2006, 12:32 PM
With all the air travel we have today and the Internet, etc., they say the world is getting smaller. Well, one thing for sure, if you are above the earth, sooner or later you will be down.....and you can't miss it.

fulldraw
09-28-2006, 12:40 PM
I never go up a tree with-out my harness (a full-body harness seat of the pants brand) if I fall it will be the best $60.00 I ever spent.


Good Luck to All and Be Safe,

deepwoods
09-28-2006, 01:05 PM
Just a free word of advise. Those continuous loop straps are not good safety straps. When you fall they tighten up on you like an anaconda. Its like a hangmans noose. They more you weigh, the more they constrict. Trust me I know. It stopped my fall but I almost passed out from not being able to breathe. I had strap burns under each arm and felt like it broke my ribs.

A safe and successful season to all of you.

elvis
09-28-2006, 02:10 PM
if I fall it will be the best $60.00 I ever spent.




even if you dont fall i would still consider it the best 60 bucks ever spent

Anita Dwink
09-28-2006, 06:03 PM
I instruct the class that no homemade stand is safe . I purchased a hunter`s safety system and hopefully more peace of mind. Hitting the tree steps on the way down tears through parts of your body as you fall . I know three who have fallen . None are close to what they were before the fall .

michigandeerslayer
09-28-2006, 08:18 PM
I love me way to much not to use one.Now that was funny but all and all harnesses save lives

dtg
09-28-2006, 09:00 PM
After numerous years of struggling for what seemed forever with a regular full body harness in the dark, I broke down and got the Hunter Safety Pro last year. It was the best thing I've ever bought for hunting, it's darn near idiot proof. I say darn near, because an idiot will find a way to screw ANYTHING up. It is comfortable and has LOTS of pockets. It is a little on the heavy side, but you don't notice it once you're sitting, in fact you forget you even have it on!!!!

itchyscratchpad
09-29-2006, 08:34 AM
This story brought back a memory that I can quickly share. Eleven years ago I ventured into fencerow field behind my house to refurbish an old platform stand on a hot deer run. I took my 3 year old son w/me and while he explored, I started screwing in tree steps on my way up. I have always been fearless about being elevated and was frequently to careless. I blindly stepped back onto a small branch, mistaking it for the main limb and snap! Plummetted 12' down, landing flat on my back, tearing a chunk of meat off my calf on the serrated tree step. When I came to, my son was standing next to me bawling and I went through a hazy check of what condition I was in. Other than my throbbing leg, I was remarkably all right. Had to carry my boy back home through god awful briars, jump a creek etc. Got home and told him to keep this our secret, at which point he immediately outpaced me and proceeded to tell my wife and the entire neighborhood how "daddy flew out of a tree". I missed a stump on that fall by mere inches and no doubt I would have been crippled or worse yet dead. I am still haunted by the image of my 3 year old standing over me. My son is 12 now and will be hunting for the first time this fall from an elevated blind. Both of us will be sititng in a double ladder stand and we will both be wearing harnesses.

InTheRiver
09-29-2006, 12:20 PM
I use my harness to nock off those hard shots around the tree

Bob's Outdoors
09-29-2006, 02:33 PM
My buddy was hunting a tree stand with all the proper equipment and harnesses and the tree NEXT to his fell, wiping him and his stand right out of the tree. He was left hanging from the harness looking down at a broad head pointing up at him.

50+ year old tree, not a particularly windy day and it picks THEN to fall over. You never know.

He is sure the harness saved his life.