This is the second year for Woodworker's Safety Week. Started last year by Wood Whisperer Marc Spagnulo, Woodworker's Safety Week is one week dedicated to instruction, tips, and awareness of safety in and around the woodshop. I know I don't need to tell you that woodworking, hand or power, is inherently dangerous. Anything that can cut wood easily can cut you easier. While the magazines discuss router safety and the wearing of ANSI approved eye wear, I thought I'd add my two cents about the unique safety precautions in the unplugged shop. I'll add a new blog entry each day for the coming 5 days to let you know how important I think this subject is. Today, I just want to talk about hand tool shop safety awareness.
There aren't many of us who are full time professional hand tool woodworkers. Many of us perform our woodworking after working a full day's work. For years, I and people like me, have been beating the drum, encouraging you to pick up the pace in your stolen hours. The result can be a perfect storm for accidents; The rush to get something done, the lack of basic instruction, the need to figure out where you left off 4 days ago, physical fatigue, and for those 9-5 computer users, eye strain, all conspire to hurt you.
So let's start out the week with the recognition that we hand tool users, while arguably safer than our powered up friends, are not immune to workshop accidents. And while easily preventable cuts are by far the most common injury for us, other, more serious threats loom. The bottom line is, we are woodworkers just like everybody else and we need to take safety seriously. For the next week, I'll discuss some specific hand tool threats, what I do about them, and hopefully raise your consciousness about Woodworker's Safety.
Thanks Marc for this great idea. I'm looking forward to checking out all my favorite blogs (see menu at left) to see what they have to say. Thanks also to Kari Hultman, whom I met yesterday and who told me about this (I missed it last year).
Adam
P.S. A&M blog has some of the smartest readers on the internet. On Saturday, I'll collect the tips and wisdom from those of you who comment or email me this week. I'll post my favorites to Saturday's blog entry to cap off Woodworker's Safety Week.