Scottish Daily Mail

Chainsaw is lifesaver for gamekeeper

- By Richard Marsden and Tom Witherow

A GAMEKEEPER left trapped under a two-ton tree cheated death after he managed to cut himself free with a chainsaw.

Kieron Robbins was stranded in woodland a mile from the nearest property when the 90ft ash fell.

It pinned his legs to the forest floor and left his mobile phone out of reach in a trouser pocket.

The partially fallen tree had been blocking a path so Mr Robbins, 34, tried to saw through it but the wood snapped and slammed into him, knocking him to the ground.

He was saved from death after managing to reach the chainsaw that had landed him in the predicamen­t in the first place.

Mr Robbins said yesterday that he spent three minutes cutting through sections of the trunk until he finally freed himself and called the landowner for help.

After being found in the dense, hilly woodland, he was airlifted to hospital where doctors found he had broken his right ankle in two places. His left leg – which took the weight of the tree – was ‘black and blue’ and suffered torn ligaments.

Mr Robbins, who lives close to the woods in Abberley, Worcesters­hire, said: ‘The tree flew back like a boomerang. It hit me in the chest. If that tree came up another half a foot it would have killed me.

‘I was screaming for help in the middle of the wood but no one knew I was there. Instinct kicked in and I got the saw. I started the saw as close as I could to the leg to take the pressure off. It got stuck a couple of times but brute force kicked in. I was in a lot of pain and in shock.’

Mr Robbins, who has been using chainsaws since the age of 18, added: ‘If that chainsaw hadn’t been there, I wouldn’t be here. I am a very lucky boy.’

After releasing himself and retrieving his phone from his left pocket, Mr Robbins called landowner Richard Jeavons-Fellows, who lives with his wife Sally, an intensive care nurse, on the 120-acre estate.

She was the first to reach Mr Robbins and checked his vital signs as paramedics headed to the scene on August 8. He spent three days in hospital.

A West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman said: ‘He was incredibly lucky not to have suffered more serious injuries.’

 ??  ?? Forest rescue: A paramedic prepares to take Mr Robbins to hospital
Forest rescue: A paramedic prepares to take Mr Robbins to hospital
 ??  ?? Lucky to be alive: Kieron Robbins
Lucky to be alive: Kieron Robbins

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