A worker employed by a tree lopping company had his left leg amputated, while assisting with the lowering of branches using a rope system.
The rope in use was green, approximately 30 metres long and tied around the base of the tree twice. Approximately 10 metres of the rope was being used to lower branches and the remaining 20 metres of the rope was on the ground next to the worker, who was standing beside a truck mounted elevating work platform. The worker had untied the rope from a branch that he had just lowered and was sending it back up the tree. Another person then dragged that branch away to feed it into the wood chipper. The spare rope length beside the worker became snagged in the branch as it was dragged towards the chipper.
When the branch was fed into the wood chipper, the rope was also drawn into the moving parts of the machine. It appears that the rope was either pulled taut between the tree and the wood chipper, hitting the worker, or, as the rope travelled towards the chipper at speed the whipping affect caught the workers leg. The worker was thrown against one of the outriggers on the elevating work platform by the rope, cutting off his leg.
The site supervisor, who was overseeing the operation, immediately shut down the wood chipper and commenced first aid.
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