dmccarty
Super Star Member
My area has had quite a few tractor deaths and injuries lately....
One was a guy who had is foot and hand taken off in a chipper.
The latest one and the strangest is http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/09/27/704921/rameses-owner-fights-for-his-life.html.
This farmer owns the Ram that is the mascot for UNC in Chapel Hill. He missed the last step getting off of his tractor a few weeks ago and bruised his hip. He is in CRITICAL condition and it does not sound good.
I will admit that I kinda jump off the tractor. The only time it has been a problem is when I landed on a rounded over itty bitty rock that I could not see and my boot twisted to the side when I landed. Kinda sprained the ankle a bit but not bad.
To think you could fall and be in the ICU.....
NEVER would have guessed that could happen.
Later,
Dan
One was a guy who had is foot and hand taken off in a chipper.
The latest one and the strangest is http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/09/27/704921/rameses-owner-fights-for-his-life.html.
This farmer owns the Ram that is the mascot for UNC in Chapel Hill. He missed the last step getting off of his tractor a few weeks ago and bruised his hip. He is in CRITICAL condition and it does not sound good.
Hogan, 54, was working late one evening and was getting off the tractor when he missed the last step, landing hard on his left leg. It didn't seem that bad, his wife, Ann, wrote later on the online journal CaringBridge.
By the next morning, however, Hogan's leg was numb, and he couldn't move it. An ambulance took him to UNC Hospitals, where doctors have been treating him for rhabdomyolysis.
The condition is caused when the tissue around an injured muscle starts to die and releases toxins into the body that can damage the kidneys.
Chris Hogan, who lives nearby, was at Hogan's Magnolia View Farm all last week helping family, friends and neighbors get in the hay, milk the cows and feed the animals.
...
Since the fall, Rob Hogan has had several tests and surgeries, said Ann's sister-in-law, Regina Leonard. Doctors have removed part of his left hip and upper leg, and he's on dialysis. The damage has spread to his abdomen, too, forcing the removal of a large part of his colon and intestines. His kidneys are not functioning, Leonard said.
Late this week, Hogan opened his eyes slightly and squeezed the nurse's hand, Leonard said. By the weekend, he was breathing more on his own, with help from the respirator, although he remained unconscious. "We're very cautiously optimistic," Leonard said. "They are basically going to do surgery on him every day for the next week."
I will admit that I kinda jump off the tractor. The only time it has been a problem is when I landed on a rounded over itty bitty rock that I could not see and my boot twisted to the side when I landed. Kinda sprained the ankle a bit but not bad.
To think you could fall and be in the ICU.....
NEVER would have guessed that could happen.
Later,
Dan