I use a sharp pair of tweezers.
Indeed, and also very sharp on both the point and the sides of the slope of the tip down to the point.There are no nerves in the outer layer of the skin ( the epidermis ) so it is painless to open the puncture a little. Nothing beats a hypodermic needle combined with massaging the sprinter out.
Ok you get the biggest splinter award!!!Agree with the scalpel and tweezers method.
Good quality tweezers with perfectly machined tips are certainly worth the money.
Once I had a splinter go directly in the top of my thumbnail and all the way past the knuckle of my thumb so it wouldn't bend. Couldn't get it out with pliers so drove to the hospital a and e.
When I told them I had a splinter I thought they were going to throw me out, then I showed them my thumb.
The nurse numbed it up and pulled some out, "all done" she said.
"I don't think so" I replied.
"What do you mean ?" she said.
"I still can't bend my thumb".
She looked again and pulled a matchstick sized bit of wood out. Not fun, my thumbnail still grows with a ridge there.
Ollie
I had a splinter of utile (soaked in old engine oil) go through my palm and out between the knuckles.Ok you get the biggest splinter award!!!
Black thorn is a B itch.OP - think yourself lucky it's not a blackthorn.
This gear is great. I had a metal splinter that I couldn't cut out. Proper irritant. Asked the pharmacist while I was in for summat else and he suggested this. For a couple of quid you get a massive supply as you only need a tiny amount.I use whatever is handy, can be anything from a panel pin to an inch chisel.......
Magnesium Sulphate will draw it out if you don't want to go down the diy surgery route.
https://www.boots.com/boots-pharmac...l-7gwuZlV-HXKK-OoxxoC_ooQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
Just wondering if you folks sterilize those implements before use, as I'd imagine various oils wouldn't be great for oneself.
Just noting say if you look at various piccs posted here regarding magnified edges from D_W
you can see that the oil isn't easy to remove.
I must look this up again, but if I'm not mistaken, I think I've heard some bushcraft/survival folk mention to hold said tool under a flame and get red hot beforehand, and not to wipe the carbon off,
as it's now sterile.
Just wondering if this is better than not doing it?
Cheers, interesting thread.
Never had a thorn or splinter like some here, but plenty a dirty cut, and always used lots of neat dettol in a little tubular container of some sort packed with tissue, often going back for seconds,
and not stopping until the skin is nice and wrinkly.
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