[AT] OT: Retiring from roof work

charlie hill charliehill at embarqmail.com
Sat Mar 31 06:05:06 PDT 2012


Wow.  Sorry to hear that Dean!  Glad you weren't more severely hurt.  I too 
have gained a new respect for ladder safety in recent years.  I had to go on 
my roof and seal a minor leak around my chimney prior to the last hurricane. 
The ladder was secure enough but I still called my neighbor and told him if 
I didn't call him back in 30 minutes to come check on me.  Just as I got 
down off the ladder he came around the corner.  All was well.

I hope you don't intend to try that trick again but here's a tip, something 
I've done before.   Park your pickup truck near the building.  Set the 
ladder up in the pickup bed and place the bottom of the ladder against the 
bed wall on the side or front end depending on where you are able to locate 
the truck.  If you can't get the ladder angle correct that way most trucks 
have slots in the bed now that you can slide a 2x6 down into to devide the 
load.
It gives you a secure platform for the ladder and reduces the amount of 
ladder you need by about 2 1/2 feet.
Just make sure you have the truck keys in your pocket!!!! grins.

Charlie



-----Original Message----- 
From: Dean Vinson
Sent: Saturday, March 31, 2012 8:45 AM
To: 'Antique tractor email discussion group'
Subject: [AT] OT: Retiring from roof work

Some years ago I came to the realization that high work involving an
extended extension ladder no longer held much appeal for me.   Memories of
the many thousands of square feet of barns and houses I'd painted from an
extension ladder many years ago, confidently zipping up and down that
ladder, had gradually been replaced by an awareness of how high up I was and
how much harm could result in the event of an accident.  So I had some good
gutter-guard strips installed on my house, gave up on high Christmas
decorations, and decided I'd hire out any high repairs that needed doing.

But the low roof, the single-story roof over my garage, still felt within
range.  So I was up there this past Tuesday evening, spraying some mildew
treatment on the north-facing second-story wall of my house that's nice and
accessible from that garage roof.  I used the extension ladder but didn't
need to extend it since it's only eight feet or so to the gutter.  Before I
climbed up the first time, I worried that the base of the ladder might slide
out from underneath me once I had my weight on the ladder, since the asphalt
driveway slopes slightly downhill and away from the garage.  To guard
against that possibility, I flipped the little "feet" from the normal
hard-rubber pad position to the spiky metal fork position, assuming that
would prevent any sliding.  That's the part I wish I could go back and put a
little more thought and effort into.

After a couple of trips up and down the ladder to apply the spray treatment
and then to rinse it off, I was on my way back up for a third time, with the
garden hose and a scrub brush to tend to the bad spots.  When I reached the
height of the roof, with my left foot still on the ladder I reached my right
foot out for the roof... and felt the bottom of the ladder sliding out from
beneath me.  It's no fun to have that moment of clarity about exactly what
is happening, when it's something you'd really rather not happen.

Fortune smiled greatly upon me, though, given the range of potential
outcomes.  Some neighbors saw me fall, came to my assistance, called for an
ambulance within seconds, and I was in an emergency room within minutes.  I
suffered a couple of hairline fractures to my right hip socket, and a
hairline fracture to the right front side of my skull, and a big gash on my
forehead.  None of those injuries required surgery or a cast, and I'm now
home from the hospital and back on my feet with the assistance of crutches,
free to bear as much weight on my right side as I feel like, free to start
working my way back toward a normal routine.

In hindsight I'm kicking myself big time about the base of the ladder--about
correctly recognizing the danger but then falling into complacency and
taking a shortcut (and the wrong one) to address it.  Those spiky feet are
probably best intended for use on a lawn or bare soil, not a hard surface
like asphalt.  Given the slope of the driveway I should have taken much more
robust steps to make sure the base of the ladder was fully restrained.

I'm very grateful to be alive, unparalyzed, and with no more than a black
eye, some stitches, a pair of crutches, and a lot of tenderness to deal
with.  But I don't think I need to be doing any other roof work in the
future.

Let's be careful out there!

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio
www.vinsonfarm.net


_______________________________________________
AT mailing list
http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at 




More information about the AT mailing list