Louise Peacock
Mar 17, 2021

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1)Special coveralls made with cut resistant fibres called Chainsaw pants. 2)Steel toe- steel shaft boots to the knee, worn under the pants. 3)Elbow high fingerless gloves — cut resistant fabric and 4) butcher gloves (chainlink metal things that make movements hard, but are totally cut resistant.) You can see from the photos that the chainsaw pants were probably meant for a larger person and the chainlink gloves are a really sloppy fit. But, with that stuff on I will not be cutting myself.

Should be safe to use that saw now!
Steel toes and shafted winter work boots which I wear most of the year.
the actual Zubat 300 sales photo
The cut I got from my brand new Zubat 300 while cutting that stump. The needle prior to stitching hurt more than the cut, that saw is razor sharp, many arborists prefer using the Zubat to using a chainsaw..
Cut stitched and not bleeding. No muscle or tendons severed.
6 weeks after the accident right after stitches out.

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Louise Peacock
Louise Peacock

Written by Louise Peacock

Louise Peacock is a writer, garden designer, Reiki practitioner, singer-songwriter & animal activist. Favorite insult “Eat cake & choke” On Medium since 2016.

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