dpkimmel2001
Team Owner
My mother-in-law is one lucky lady. She'll be okay. Others may not be so lucky in her situation.
Yesterday, late afternoon/evening my mother-in-law was cooking some meals for the guys that are going away to deer camp for buck season. At some point she reached above the stove into the cabinet for what, I don't know. In the process she happened to bump the cooking spray which fell out down onto the stove. Whatever it hit, the pan or simply the stove top, it caused a puncture in the can. It immediately caught fire spraying all over her arms/face/kitchen. Her instinct was to run away. Fortunately, my father-in-law was there and able to come to her aide. All of the cabinets around the stove had cooking spray sprayed on them and were on fire. He was able to extinguish those with a fire extinguisher that he had close by.
He took her to the hospital as she had burns mainly to her entire left arm/hand and to a lessor extent her left side of her face. I don't know the full extent of her injuries but she is at home so it seems to me she's very lucky to have escaped a more serious injury.
I'm only telling you this because it seems like a situation that could be avoided by keeping those types of things that are flammable and under pressure in a location where that couldn't occur. We store our cooking spray above the stove too never giving it a thought that something like that could happen. Not anymore.
Yesterday, late afternoon/evening my mother-in-law was cooking some meals for the guys that are going away to deer camp for buck season. At some point she reached above the stove into the cabinet for what, I don't know. In the process she happened to bump the cooking spray which fell out down onto the stove. Whatever it hit, the pan or simply the stove top, it caused a puncture in the can. It immediately caught fire spraying all over her arms/face/kitchen. Her instinct was to run away. Fortunately, my father-in-law was there and able to come to her aide. All of the cabinets around the stove had cooking spray sprayed on them and were on fire. He was able to extinguish those with a fire extinguisher that he had close by.
He took her to the hospital as she had burns mainly to her entire left arm/hand and to a lessor extent her left side of her face. I don't know the full extent of her injuries but she is at home so it seems to me she's very lucky to have escaped a more serious injury.
I'm only telling you this because it seems like a situation that could be avoided by keeping those types of things that are flammable and under pressure in a location where that couldn't occur. We store our cooking spray above the stove too never giving it a thought that something like that could happen. Not anymore.