T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1047.1 | Steel bridge near Barre Dam | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO6B-2/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Fri Mar 17 1989 10:06 | 26 |
| I've had two crashes bad enough to hurt the 2 wheeler, both
in the rain with reduced visability.
The first one really doesn't count here since I was on a Suzuki
X-6. I was in traffic with a rain smeared face shield. The old
station wagon in front of me didn't have any brake lights, graunch.
Rode home slowly with handlebars at 45 deg angle. No motorcycles
since.
Of interest to this file was the Barre Dam/Rt. 62 steel bridge
disaster. We were on a hilly metric century just east of the Quabbin.
It had just started to rain. As I'm zinging down this hill, I see
that the road turns silvery at it's low point - Brakes! and HARD!
Just before I hit the silver, which had then resolved into a steel
bridge with ridges running parrallel to traffic, I released the
brakes and straightend my track. Still only got about 10 feet across
the bridge before I went down. Fortunately, I was on the Avatar,
so it was a gentle sideways flop, but I was still going fast enough
that the seat got bent and a deraillure got wiped out. After licking
my wounds (bridge scrape is a sub-category of road rash), I tried
to slow down other cyclists. I succeeded except for one, who got
on the bridge at speed but went down even sooner than I did. He
ended up catching some fingers in the grating and needing over $4K
of reconstructive surgury.
During the NEAR '83 ride over this bridge, we put cardboard
over the right edge. Some people have written to the state about
this bridge: they put up a warning sign for bicyclists.
Moral: watch out for the steel bridge on Rt. 62 near Barre Dam!
|
1047.2 | Dumb but true | MCIS2::DELORIEA | Common sense isn't | Fri Mar 17 1989 10:42 | 27 |
| I was at Cape Cod for a weekend of biking and windsurfing
at my aunts house when my worst spill happened. I was out riding on a windless
afternoon having a great time when I noticed a big thunderhead bearing down on
the cape. I started to pick up the pace to see if I could get home before the
rain fell. Riding about a mile away for the house the wind picked up and was
pushing me faster. I was drafting cars really motoring with a big smile on my
face thinking I was going to beat this storm, then boom, rain drops so big they
hurt. I was about 1/2 mile from the house still motoring( I don't know why I
was already soaked). I came up on the turn from main street to a side street I
needed to take going way to fast. Well, there are some that say they remember
it happening in slow motion, but I'll tell you this was fast forward. One
second I was up and a milli-sec later I was making road pizza sliding accross
the road into the dirt shoulder. (Hot tar and rain don't mix well) My feet
never came out of the toe clips, but some how the bike was facing one way with
me the other. My elbow was hamburg as well as my knee and hip. The bike was
fine. I rode the rest of the way home bleeding all over myself. Now my aunt is
one of those neat as a pin, don't sit on the sofa types. The kind that has
towels in the bathroom but makes you use paper towels. Well when she saw me,
she almost didn't let me in the house.
I learned my lesson. Also after the cut on my elbow healed, I would
find pimples with sand in them for about a year later. YUCH!
Now if we were talking about motorcycle accidents I could tell you of
my superman impersonation.
Tom
|
1047.3 | How can anyone so stupid still be alive.. | RDGENG::MACFADYEN | Just a Persistent Message Object | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:02 | 34 |
| Re previous: ouch!
I've had several notable spills in the past ten years, all of them
avoidable.
1980: I was on a lonely country road, no cars, sunny day. The sun was
casting a really good shadow of me, and while watching it I cycled off
the edge of the road onto the grass verge (that really got my attention
back). When I tried to jump the bike back onto the road, I went head
over heels. Grazed an elbow (flies started settling on the blood),
buckled a wheel. Pretty stupid...
1983: A big photographic print drum in a plastic bag on the handlebars.
Going round a bend, my knee caught the drum, which flipped the
handlebars round, which threw me face-first on the road. Broken
spectacles, taken to hospital in an ambulance, cut on cheek needing
stitches. Pretty stupid...
1985: December, first proper frost. Getting on the bike, I noticed, or
rather didn't notice, that there was black ice on the road. Took the
usual bend at the usual speed, bike fell over, grazed knee. Pretty
stupid...
1988: Had noticed that rear tyre was cut and inner tube bulging
(serious on a 110 psi tyre). However, I put a canvas patch inside the
tyre and went out anyway. Really motoring with a strong following wind
on a straight stretch of road, loud bang, rear wheel going everywhere.
Fortunately there was a wide grass verge I could ditch onto rather than
risk failing to control the bike and coming off on the road. I did so,
was unhurt, but the bike wasn't - top tube bent, what a bummer. Pretty
stupid...
Rod
|
1047.4 | Oh yeah, that bridge. | CTCADM::ROTH | If you plant ice you'll harvest wind | Fri Mar 17 1989 16:07 | 16 |
| I fell on that stupid bridge in Barre in one of last year's BMB brevets.
In hindsight, you can probably get across by riding right at the edge
where it's really rusty - otherwise it's nearly impossible to get
across it in the rain.
One of the only other spills I've taken was when my left handlebar
cracked off and got caught in the front wheel while I was out of the saddle
sprinting. Totalled the front fork, and basically the frame. Probably
good I had a helmet, but it happened so fast I hardly remember exactly
*what* transipired...
Had to hitch home, bleeding from some minor scrapes - a miracle it wasn't
more serious.
- Jim
|
1047.5 | I slow down for the RR tracks | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Fri Mar 17 1989 16:12 | 22 |
| I've only crashed once. I know. By saying it means I'm in for
a bad one this weekend.
It was probably about 8-10 years ago. I was doing a bike tour around
Lake Winnepausaukee. Total space cadet watching the beautiful scenery.
I'm coming down a hill, and there's a set of railroad tracks right
at the bottom. The whole tour group is sitting in a grassy patch
eating lunch off to the side of the road right beyond the railroad
tracks. I look up and see my group sitting there. I also see the
set of railroad tracks. Neither of these 2 sites registers in my
brain to make me hit my brakes. I don't recall *how* I ended up
in the middle of the road, as in I don't know if I flew over the
handle bars, or fell over to the side and rolled. The end results
were actually more black and blues that scrapes, with the scrapes
being limited to my knees and elbows, yet black and blues covering
60% of my body. The front wheel taught me the definition of a potato
chip, though I was more concerned about the scratched paint on my
2 month old bike. And one of our tour guides was actually kind
enough to bend my wheel into shape enough so that I could ride the
10 miles or so into town to buy a new rim. What a helluva nice guy.
-Nancy
|
1047.6 | A bag full of videos got me | BALMER::MUDGETT | did you say FREE food? | Fri Mar 17 1989 19:36 | 32 |
|
At crashing I'm something of an expert. First let me deflect some
of the criticism tword my son. He was about 8. We were riding down
a sidewalk that had willow trees and a spider or somekind of insect
was hanging from it and he went off the sidewalk and crashed. When
I got to him he was STEAMED that the bug was there. We still laugh
about it.
My worst recent crash was fairly tame by your accounts. My wife
and I were biking hom efrom the video rental store. I had the movies
and some other things in a bulging bag and was carrying it in my
right hand. Well the second right hand turn did it...yup right in
the front tire. I can still remember the whole bike standing
(momentarily) on the front tire.
The front tire was ruined, the fork was mashed but my ego! It was
worse off than the bike! It was a brand new Schwinn World Sport
and I was carrying it home. I can still remember the feeling I had
sad, hurt, embarrased for being such a jerk, steamed that I was
such a jerk, worried that I was going to have to go to the Bike
Shop and explain what all the bent stuff was and how it got that
way, I wanted to be alone, etc. All this for a bike! Good grief
if it was a car I'd be looking forward to what kind of rental car
I could use while it was being fixed. My wife (who is truly a Saint)
tried to consol me but to no avail. I walked home the rest of the
way. I bought a new fork and wheel. Then I had the old wheel and
fork fixed...Suprisingly they have procedures for doing that so
there was no need to feel like the first one this happened to!
Oddly enough that was the last really bad one I've had so like Nancy
I'll probably auger in this weekend.
|
1047.7 | still alive, I think? | DECWET::LICATA | Mark Licata DECwest CSSE | Tue Mar 21 1989 00:59 | 10 |
| I was seven years old and not looking ahead of me (day-dreaming) and
flying down a steep hill. At the bottom I ran into the back of a parked
truck and flew into the bed. The owner came out some time later and
found me passed out in the back bed of the pickup. I never even saw
the truck coming. I could swear he hit me!
Another time we were playing chicken. Both parties would head down
opposing hills at each other meeting at the bottom and the guy who
steered away first was the whimp. We both collided and my new bike
had only 3 spokes left unbroken.
|
1047.8 | Stupid bike tricks | CIMAMT::CHINNASWAMY | OH Bother! | Tue Mar 21 1989 08:34 | 33 |
| re -.1: I think you you change the name to NUTS or CRAZY or maybe
IDIOTS. :-) :-).
I have had three crashes other than the usual oops can't get to the
straps - BIFF!
I will only mention my most stupid crash here since the others were
from loosing traction on the road. My girlfriend and I were going for
a nice ride on the cape code rail trail. We got the bikes off the car
and together. She immediately heads down the trail a good pace. I am
still getting on the bike. I get on and start pedaling before strapping
myself in. After I get some speed I reach down and tighten up my left
strap. Now, I hadn't been on this trail many times before this but I
did know there were these 4-5 inch round steel posts at intersections
between the trail and crossing roads. Sooo, knowing this I stayed over
to the right side of the trail. As I was bending down to get the right
strap tightened up I passed a pole on my left. I subconciousely (sp?)
must have thought that was it because I ended up veering to the left.
Suddenly, I see an orange blurr appear in front of me. I had absolutely
no time to react and ended up hitting the pole with my handle bars and my
knee. I don't recall exactly what happened but my girlfriend ,who looked
back when she heard the bang, said that I sort of flipped forward and
sideways and when I reached full leg extension the straps (which I had so
thoughtfully tightened well) didn't release. I guess I started to do a half
gainer then since the straps didn't let go and the bike was behind the
pole stopped dead and fell stright down. Now I know what a dog feels like
when it reaches the end of its leash at full stride :-). Fortunately my
knee is already recked so I was back on the bike in a few weeks.
Mano
|
1047.9 | | ANKH::CRITZ | A noid is annoyed | Tue Mar 21 1989 10:28 | 21 |
| Back about 1957. Ride a couple of miles to the Boy Scout
meeting, which was canceled. Jump on the bike, head away
from the building, down the sidewalk. Just before I passed
the alley, a car turns in. I hit the right front fender,
flew across the hood, and broke the antenna off with my
arm. Front wheel was a mess. Inside of left bicep cut from
antenna. Friendly police officer throws bike in back of
cruiser and takes me home. Mom's outside in the front yard
when we pull in. She musta thought I was real hurt. I had
bruise on my shin from knee to ankle. Never rode on the
sidewalk again.
Now that I think about it, I probably scared the driver of
the car to death, it was that quick.
Mano:
Yup, I did the same thing once, although it was a car, and
the front tire stuck under the bumper.
Scott
|
1047.10 | | EST::CRITCHLOW | | Tue Mar 21 1989 13:03 | 27 |
| > Mano:
>
> Yup, I did the same thing once, although it was a car, and
> the front tire stuck under the bumper.
>
> Scott
I'll join up with the ranks of running into slow or non-moving cars.
Mine had a little twist:
I was coming home from soccer practice down the 3/4 mile hill from the
high school to my house. I had a 6' friend sitting on the seat with his
hands on my shoulders while I stood on the pedals and steered. Well a
car in front of us stopped short we couldn't because center pull brakes
are not designed to stop 300+ pounds of kid on steel rims. The front
wheel was potato chip city. The fork was recked. The head tube was moved
a little but the bike was ridable. The amazing thing was that I was not
hurt nor was my friend. When I think back now I still am reminded that I
was a typical teenager who had little awareness of what clear thinking
and logic is about. This is because I was angry at the car driver at the
time and thought he owed me a new bike because he stopped short!
I guess all teenagers lose their minds....
JC
|
1047.11 | BASH! BOOM! BANG! | RICKS::SPEAR | MYCROFTXXX | Thu Mar 23 1989 13:26 | 39 |
| I remember two "kid" crashes, and a bang up one as an adult.
My dad gave me an English 3-speed when I was much to young to ride or maintain
it. I didn't have a screwdriver or pliers to tighten loose bolts, and things
started falling off. While riding down the street Clunk the bike pivots around
the front wheel then keeps going, so I ignored it. Then CLUNK! and the bike
flips over the front wheel. Turns out the brake lever fell off and got caught
in the front spokes. I don't think I was hurt.
Later my best friend was riding the same bike and popped a wheelie. Boy, was
he surprised when the front wheel fell off and rolled away. The front fork
buried itself in the dirt. His bloody nose looked pretty bad, but he got over
it.
In 6th grade I liked making long skid marks with my banana bike. Once, going
down a long, gradual hill, with a tail wind, I decided that all that speed
could make a great skid. Unfortunately when I locked up the rear brake, the
bike just kinda fell over, and I remember flying through the air, on my hands
and knees, and a flip.
It is amazing any kid lives long enough to get some common sense!
A few years ago I was in P-town visiting some friends and having a rotten time.
I needed a good excuse to leave early. While biking thru town at 6:30am I came
over a hill and there was a car parked in the road. I turned right instead of
left, went into a dirt parking lot and BOOM into a pickup. The front fork bent
so far back that the front tire got nicked by the chain ring. (I am still
using that tire!) An ambulance took me back to my friend's cottage and I told
them I was going home. It wasn't until I got stuck in Rt. 6 traffic that I
realized I had sprained my left ankle and the clutch was killing me. I learned
to do sloppy shifts using my right foot on the clutch.
I recooperated at my cousin's house with his sister who a week before, on the
very same bike, broke 5 bones in her ankle when she fell over at a stop sign
with her foot half in the toe straps. If she had left her foot in she would
have just been bruised. The Univega got the nickname "Christine", the killer
bike, destroyer of ankles.
chris
|
1047.12 | some of my bloody history | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | drywall 'til ya drop! | Thu Mar 23 1989 17:10 | 25 |
| One (or more) each of the last 11, please. To go, with a bent chainring
and loose bottom bracket... :-) (<=== why is the idjut still smiling???)
Other than most of the previous sound real familiar, there was riding
off a sidewalk into the street at a corner where the pavement was flush
with the sidewalk (real dead-level flush, not like a wheelchair ramp).
So far, so good. I'm almost across and about to glide onto the sidewalk
across the street and I look and realize: It's about a 6 inch curb, done
in beautiful gracefully curved concrete with no edge to even show a
shadow in the afternoon light..... ooops. Front wheel actually lived
thru that, but it was new-fork time.
2 x getting hit by motorists, no major damage.
1 x each into parked car, curb at bottom of STEEP/FAST hill when a
kid...
1 x overlap wheels, go crash onto gravel shoulder (9-point hit), the
business of finding gravel months later... never mind, I *don't* want to
remeber that one...
... and lots more minor crunches/misses. This Tarzan not go out in jungle
without helmet, nooooooooooo........... almost all my best crashes were
PH, though (PreHelmet).
ken
|
1047.13 | that stupid CAT !@! | SVCRUS::CRANE | | Thu Mar 23 1989 17:13 | 22 |
|
ABOUT 6:30 P.M. on a training ride through uxbridge approaching
a long hill on Rt. 16 I was cruising at about 22-23 MPH. As I was
going by a house with a large hedge in front a cat shot out of the
hedge and right underneath my front wheel. I went down lie a ton
of bricks !! When I finaly realized what happen I looked to see
if I had hurt the cat. It was sitting there looking at me like I
was some kind of alien. I suddenly felt this unbelievable rage building
within me and as I reached for that soon to be stuffed cat it must
have sensed what I wanted to do because it took off like a shot
and I never saw it again.
I ended up with the the worst case of road rach I have ever had.
all the skin on the back of my left Thigh was gone from my hip to
about 7 inches down the back of my thigh about 4 inches wide. I
rode about 10 miles to the closest friendly house and the pain hit
me the second I sat down on a chair. I could'nt wal for 3 days after
that one.
JOhn C.
|
1047.14 | Number one dummy? | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Mar 24 1989 07:44 | 57 |
| Well, let me see if I can outdumb everyone, it's going to be hard:
First, let me say that I learned to ride as an adult and took years
to acquire skills that most folksk became adults with. Whether
or not I actually learned or have acquired bike related skills may
be open to question after this, but so it goes.
About 3 years ago I was starting out on a ride. Started on a hill.
I was out of the saddle -- then a newly acquired skill being practiced
-- I noticed that I had not yet started my computer. I reached
over to start it (still out of the saddle mind you). I do not know
how many folks can do that but I no longer consider it doable.
Then there was the training ride where I wanted to time myself on
a course which ended on a sharp right hand turn. I felt that it
was necessary to stop the computer precisely at the turn. I no
longer care whether or not I have a computer on my bike.
Way back I was test riding a short bike that I had just fixed up.
I was pedaling really fast at the bottom of a hill. My sneaker
slid forward on the untoeclipped pedal. I caught my toe on the
road. The bike wobbled, I caught it again, next revolution, full
gainer, half tuck, 5.8 points. That's the last time I didn't wear
a helmet or a shirt.
There were others. August 18, 1983. Descending Mt Washington.
Washboard road surface. Bike skipping and hopping the bumps. My
front wheel had a bump at the rim joint. The brake locked on it
while in the air, when it hit ground, street pizza.
August 6, 1987. Western slope of the Kancamagus. Riding on the
paved shoulder I was starting my computer and generally looking
at the numbers, leaving for Paris in 10 days, CRASH, I hit another
rider. I don't know who he was, he had been 50 ft in front and
decided to stop and cross the street. Damned computer!
My stoker caught her shoe in the rear wheel somewhere in France.
I hit a car crossing in front of me in June of 84. They bought
a new bike and paid a few bucks for my discomfort.
There were seven, count 'em 7, last year. Derry, NH, slipped while
stopped behind a car at an intersection (damned cleats). Townnsend,
MA, road construction, loose deep gravel in one spot, slipped. Hollis,
NH, out on the Ci�cc, feeling good, decided to power up a hill,
chain slipped out of gear, this one hurt; injured my thumb, it would
take all season to recover, maybe less if I hadn't done 43 centuries.
Two days later while riding in a pack, a rider slipped his wheel
of the road onto the shoulder and fell. Full gainer, half tuck,
only 5.7 points, I'm not as good as I used to be. With the pain
of two crashes on me, I was lent another bicycle, an Alumninum
Guerciotti and rode another 110 miles. Let's see now, 5 was, I
hit a dog 500km into a 600km event.
Ok, so noone wants to ride with me, so what, can you blame them?
ed
|
1047.15 | Good, Ed. Very entertaining! | NAC::KLASMAN | | Fri Mar 24 1989 08:10 | 28 |
| < Note 1047.14 by NOVA::FISHER "Rdb/VMS Dinosaur" >
-< Number one dummy? >-
VERY entertaining! Is that why you ride so much, to get the opportunity to
tell such funny stories?
Kevin
ps. And who said no one wants to ride with you.
Ok, ok. I'll tell my dumbest crash. August, 1986. Preparing for my first
century. I'm tooling along at 20mph on the flat when I notice the handlebar
tape on the right end of the bar looking ragged. I pull on it.
Unfortunately, I wasn't holding on very tightly with my left hand. Ever turn
your wheel 90 degrees going 20mph? Next thing I knew I was on the ground
waiting for my girlfriend (who was somewhere close behind me) to run over me.
I had visions of her sailing gracefully over me doing a face plant on the
road. What a shame to wreck such a pretty face! She avoided me (now she
wants to be a bike racer 8^) ). I couldn't wear anything but very loose
shorts for a week. Ouch!
Shortly after that (I do everything shortly) I noticed that my bike no longer
descended as gracefully as it once had. I found this out doing 45mph down the
hill in Mt Vernon, NH, when the rear wheel started jerking back and forth
violently. I thought I was gonna die. Apparently I'd bent the frame in that
self-inflicted crash!
I no longer care what my handlebar tape looks like 8^)
|
1047.16 | | VERVE::BUCHANAN | Bat | Fri Mar 24 1989 12:35 | 6 |
| re. -1, pulling handlebar tape.
I did soemthing very similar. In my case I noticed that the plug was coming out
of the end of the bar. So how do you get it back in, well you just give it a
whack with the heal of your hand. I never dawned on me that hitting the end
of your handlebars while riding isn't such a smart thing to do!
|
1047.17 | Moron number 14. | BANZAI::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Mar 24 1989 14:44 | 25 |
| re: .14. I said 7, count 'em. But then I couldn't remember what
#6 & 7 were:
#6: I was cruising out 111 going east when a BIG DUMP TRUCK started
coming out of a side street on the left making a left turn. I saw
him in plenty of time, but hell, the shoulder's 5 feet wide, plenty
of room for both of us cause we're going to be going in the same
direction but as I got closer I saw that he really intended to use
the shoulder for his tuen also, so I went over the curb rather
than hitch a ride on his bumper. Fortunately the curb was not the
usual 90� but more like 65�. I got grass stains out of it.
#7 was up on the Kanc. I was successfully negotiating the railroad
tracks when abnother guy went down, I looked over and behind when
I still had to turn. Turned wrong. Down. Boo.
The dog bite which occurred later did not involve any contact
with the pavement.
---
The 84 car crash was one where the ladies' husband said something
like, "Well, this is New Hampshire, bicycles don't have a right
of way." That's why I got the $200 for discomfort.
ed
|
1047.18 | Yeah but just look at the pro's | CTCADM::ROTH | If you plant ice you'll harvest wind | Fri Mar 24 1989 15:03 | 7 |
| We shouldn't be too hard on ourselves... for example, Davis Phinney
got his hand caught between his rear wheel and the frame while trying
to adjust his rear brake during a descent: broken wrist (or collorbone,
I don't remember.) There have been similar stories about many of the
pro racers.
- Jim
|
1047.19 | One more | FRAGLE::RICHARD | | Fri Mar 24 1989 16:36 | 18 |
|
Well, my first one goes back a few years, back when I was about nine
years old! As a kid I liked to take anything and everything mechanical
apart to see how it worked (I got hooked on electronics when I took
one of my parents radios apart & 1) couldn't figure out how it worked,
and 2), couldn't get it working again!). One day I decided to take
my coaster brake apart on my one speed. I didn't get it back together
right so it didn't "coast". I took it out for a spin anyway with some other
kids and we went tearing down the road. I went to "put on the brakes"
and when I extended the leg, up, up and away I went over the handlebars.
There's nothing like getting run over by your own bike......
#2 happened many years later. I was riding down the street when I was
overtaken by a cement truck in the same lane. I tried to jump the
curb but didn't get the front wheel up high enough. I went over the
handle bars and landed on my hands and knees on the cement. It was
months before I could ride a bike again.
|
1047.20 | Tarred and Feathered Beats Falling? | ICBB::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Fri Mar 24 1989 17:11 | 17 |
| My worst crash wasn't my most painfull. Two years ago I was
riding my bike to work when I came upon a road crew preparing to
tar a road I needed to travel on to get to work on time. I convinced
the flagman at the detour that taking a detour would make me late
for work. He allowed me to walk my bike the 1/2 mile or so down
to where the trucks were taring. They were taking a break as I
walked my bike by the parked truck. Since the tar applicator bar
stuck out over the road side I had to walk on an embancment while
trying to keep my bike on the pavement. Wouldn't you know that
I slipped on the embancment shoving my bottombracket into the valve
that controled the tar spray. Yep....instantly tarred and feathered
bike from the bottom bracket back including my shoes....new deraileur,
rim and spokes and a lot of elbow greese getting the tar off. My
pride was damaged more than any fall I have ever taken including
a few headers.
Jerry
|
1047.21 | Four score and seven years ago... | CSG001::MILLER | Vox clamantis in deserto. | Sat Mar 25 1989 19:31 | 23 |
| I have only had two bad crashes in about 45 years of recreational biking.
The first happened exactly 39 years ago today. Skipped out of school
early to enjoy the bike ride home on the first really warm springlike
day of the (brrrrrrrr) Syracuse, NY winter.
About two blocks from home, on a downhill , riding "no handed",
I coasted across an intersection and met a policeman driving across
the intersection. result? No damage to the bike....I saved it. My
knee was shattered by the front bumper, tho.
Then two years ago, I was on my Counterpoint tandem, and we decided
to stop for some rest. Betty, my first wife, got off the front,
and I was still strapped into the rat traps....OOOOOOpppppssssss,
watch out for that telephone pole, right ther.....too late....broken
shoulder. VERY embarrasing...painful too.
Both injuries still give me more than my share of pain. Thank God
for Bristol Meyers. I'd never be able to endure it.
My first wife still laughs at the thought of seeing me slowly keel
over, like I was a comedy sketch on Laugh-In. Come to think of it,
it must have looked pretty funny, at that.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=g=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
1047.22 | 1st time without training wheels | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Mon Mar 27 1989 09:24 | 13 |
| My family has this habit of showing old movies after holiday dinners.
So yesterday, after Easter Dinner, we set the old projector up,
and all setlle down for some hilarious entertainment from years
gone by. About the 3rd feature film we got to see was a movie of
Nancy trying to ride her bike without training wheels for the first
time. 4 pedals down the driveway, then fall to the right, continuing
to pedal as I go down. Get up and smile pretty for the camera.
Repeat scene.
Apparently I lied afew replies back when I said I had only fallen
once.
-Nancy
|
1047.23 | many a crash as a bike cadet... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | drywall 'til ya drop! | Mon Mar 27 1989 10:59 | 11 |
| > -< 1st time without training wheels >-
Never did try training wheels as a kid, so I had plenty o' crashes then.
Got a 26" bike when I was 7 (?) -- remember that's how they used to
measure 'em --- actually 26" wheels and a maybe 20" frame (?). Was way
too big for me, though I can comfortably ride a 26" FRAME bike now!
Anyway between the HUGE frame for a 7 yr. old and well-meaning friends
who suggested I steer AWAY from the direction I felt like falling
(wrong...) I crashed that bike on plenty of training missions, as well
as some major crunches, covered earlier.....
ken
|
1047.24 | I could have prevented it | FSTTOO::HANAUER | Mike... Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Mon Mar 27 1989 14:15 | 25 |
| Worst crash was definately the one in Bethel, VT on the AMC weekend,
about to go up Rochester Mountain after a 95 mile day. It was
October, many novices were out on bikes to see the foliage. I
was passing a bicycling teenager on the left when he took a sudden
left turn (from the right side of the road) without a look or a
signal. I hit the road very hard, whole left side of my body was
impacted.
Four broken ribs, broken Collar bone. Would have had broken foot or
ankle, but the pedal and crank (now so bent it wouldn't rotate)
shielded my foot in the toe clip. Helmet kept me from concussion.
Technically it probably was not my fault, but I now shout "on your
left" routinely as a preventative measure before I overtake anyone.
In some ways my "best" accident never quite happened. Was riding
home from work (in the Mill in those days) going east on Rt 117.
Was about to cross the narrow bridge over the Sudbury River when a
trailor truck forced me off the road (trucks are illegal on that
stretch). I was not hurt, physically. But it was that close call
which prompted me to buy and always wear a helmut. That happened
before the accident in Vermont (fortunately).
~Mike
|
1047.25 | My worst crash and I hope my last. | POETS::SCHNARE | CHARLIE SCHNARE | Wed Mar 29 1989 13:25 | 30 |
| Last year on May 14th I was doing the "B" race at the BRC training series in
Newton. We were all setting up for the field sprint, we were doing about 35
mph, when someone went down right in front of me. Thats all I remember till I
woke up 30 minutes later as they were placing me in the ambulance. They had
strapped me onto a board and immobilized my neck.
I have no recollection of the ride to the hospital because I passed out again.
I woke up in the emergency room where they started repairing me.
First thing they did was take xrays of my head. Nothing really damaged there,
just a bad concussion. My helmet saved my life! I had road rash big time on my
legs arms and shoulders. I took the skin off right to the bone on my right
ankle. My face was a mess and they called in a plastic surgeon to put that back
together for me. He worked for 3 hrs putting 200 stitches in my face.
They sent me home with some pain killers but needless to say I did not get any
sleep for the next few days.
I was in therapy for my body burns for two weeks.They would put me into a full
body tank for 20 min. Therapy for the ankle took much longer, 3 months.
Two weeks later I was riding my indoor trainer. Three weeks later I was back
out on the roads.
This was not a fun part of my cycling career.
Charlie Schnare
|
1047.26 | | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Wed Mar 29 1989 13:33 | 5 |
| Re .25
Reading this sent chills up and down my spine.
Ugh.
|
1047.27 | But what happened to the Bike? | ICBB::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Wed Mar 29 1989 13:38 | 7 |
| Re .25
Yep....this will keep me out of the Tour De Lowell for
yet another year.......yikes!
Jerry
|
1047.28 | Wrong way rider | TALLIS::JBELL | Ceci n'est pas une pipe. | | Wed Mar 29 1989 14:12 | 16 |
| How about an entry for most recent:
As I was reading this the telephone rang. My SO had been riding
om Charles Street (Boston) when another bike pulled out from
behind a parked truck and headed the wrong way on the one way
street. He also rode on the left side of the road.
There was 1/2 second of weaving left-right-left and a collision.
The damage was minor: a punctured front tire and some scratches on
the new helmet, but the accident should have never happened.
Why don't the police enforce the traffic laws for bikes?
-Jeff
|
1047.29 | | ANKH::CRITZ | A noid is annoyed | Wed Mar 29 1989 14:21 | 9 |
| Jeff,
They (the Police) don't/can't even enforce the traffic
laws for automobiles.
If I see an idiot riding the wrong way, I usually yell
at them.
Scott
|
1047.30 | Sign Me Mr. Lucky | DELNI::GRACE | life is unpredictable; eat dessert first | Wed Mar 29 1989 20:39 | 52 |
| While doing my usual training run about 1/4 mi. from my house last Sept.,
I fell off my bike while still secured into my Shimano clipless pedals. It
was probably when I stood up to climb a small hill. I might have swerved
the front wheel while trying to exert, hit a small rut, and went down on my
right side.
Apparently, (w/o help of any clear memory of the event), I fell and hit my
head (good helmet). I walked to my home the 1/4 mi. in my cleated biking
shoes to my house. Yes, it was dinnertime and I could smell the food
cooking. Well, I walked dazed and slightly confused into the house (so my
wife says) with my cleated shoes on and said to my wife, "It had to happen
to me sometime." She thought I meant a flat tire.
I then showed her the scrapes and cuts on my ankle and shoulder that
were bleeding. Then we looked at the helmet. The inner styrofoam lining
of the Bell V1-Pro was cracked in the spot that corresponded to the
small red mark on my forehead. After this accident, I cannot see how
anyone can choose to NOT protect themselves with adequate headgear of
some sort.
Mentally, for the next few hours, I was on a different goofy street than
the one I usually am. I couldn't remember things in short term memory for
too long. I kept asking every 5 min. or so what day it was. After 2 hours,
I was normal again, much to the chagrin of my wife. She was hoping for my
bad jokes to go away! You can't win, I guess.
As a professional rehab nurse, my wife treated head-injured patients for a
living (lucky for me). She felt quite fortunate that she did not have
to come home each night, thereafter, and have her work waiting for her!
I recovered without any apparent permanent damage. I consider myself quite
fortunate to be with it mentally right now. I did see a chiropractor and an
acupuncturist for treatment after the fall to help realign and straighten
me out (kind of like a car frame-straightening shop, I guess).
After the accident, my memory did come back pretty well. I was not unconscious
right after, as far as I know. My only difficulty was occasionally for
about a week after the fall, I had to search for a word or two that I just
couldn't grab. On those few occasions, I knew what the object was but I
couldn't get the word out.
There was a possibility that the fall did affect one of my cranial nerves
because only two months later I came down with an illness that consisted of
an inflammation to one of the cranial nerves. This illness is called Bell's
Palsy. I totally recovered from that in a month with the assistance of the
acupuncturist.
That's the REST of the story (as Paul Harvey would say).
Russ
|
1047.31 | wha..thud. | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Fri Mar 31 1989 09:58 | 17 |
| Mine was almost identical to .0, except:
a) It was dark
b) There was a powercut, so no street lights
c) There was a couple in the front seat of the car
d) I smashed the rear screen with my head
e) The driver of the parked car tried to sue me for damage.
Since he was parked in an unlit road with no lights, I was not judged
to be at fault. Strictly speaking, I should have seen the car -- but my
front light only picked up the reflectors moments before I hit it. I
don't know who was more surprised -- me, or the occupants of the car.
Anyway, it put a non-fixable bend in the top tube and a few bits
of glass in my face (though he was more worried about the bits of glass
on his shiny paintwork).
Richard
|
1047.32 | Another week, another crash | CESARE::JOHNSON | Truth is stranger than fiction | Mon Apr 03 1989 04:44 | 11 |
| At this rate, I'll easily surpass Ed Fisher's record. Some distinction!
Last 2km of a 68km road race. Flat, straight road, beautiful weather.
~40km/h. The guy in front of me runs up the wheel of the guy in
front of him. Six of us go down.
Most of us were able to get up and finish with various degrees of
road rash. The bright red patches of mine nicely complement the
purple bruises left by last week's crash....
MATT
|
1047.33 | ouch, it still hurts | AKOV75::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Mon Apr 03 1989 14:17 | 22 |
|
Riding on an unknown (unknown to me) paved road through the woods, I came upon
a downhill stretch. Taking advantage, I began to speed up. The downhill became
steeper. The road began to curve back and forth, descending through high banks
on either side. Soon there was no point in pedaling, since I'd run out the
gears. Just as well, since all my concentration was devoted to getting around
the corners at this speed.
As I came around another corner, I saw (to my everlasting suprise) that the
pavement ended about 20' ahead with a substantial drop to the unpaved road. The
un-pavement was rutted, with 3 - 6" rocks strewn about the surface. There was
no chance of stopping, so I just slowed as best I could. I dodged my way among
the rocks, knowing the traction would give out sooner or later. When it did I
leaned in to take the fall on my side, rather than over that bars. Good thing I
had all that practice ditching bikes as a kid. I was surveying my injuries
when I saw the house at the end of the road, and the large dog who was
about to give chase ...
Then there was the time I stuck my hand down to wipe some glass from the front
tire. Unfortunately I was distracted and my hand came down behind the fork
rather than in front of it. Imagine stopping your bike cold using the front
"hand" brake at 20 mph... yes Martha, bicycles do fly ...
|
1047.34 | If only I could remember it | DUB01::OSULLIVAN | | Wed Apr 05 1989 10:25 | 32 |
| I recognise some of the crashes from previous discussions re the
merits of helmets. I posted this tale of woe before under some helmet
note.
Back about 1979 I was out training with a friend. He had, as usual
(then not now!), dropped me , so I was really hammering to get back
up to him. The rest is a blank.
I woke up in hospital about two hours later with a doctor putting
stitches in my face. It was difficult that week to tell where the
cuts were behind the clotted blood that they left on my face. I
spent 8 days in hospital. I could eventually eat after 5 as my
swolen mouth (15 stitches in there somewhere) eased down. So it
was not until day 5 then that I noticed that my front four teeth
were no longer there whereas I had long since realised that my nose
was a funny shape! My memory took quite a while to come
back after the accident. I could recognise my family about 1 hour
after I woke up, but as in a previous note could not get the words
to say the things I wanted to say. This lasted only a few hours
thankfully.
When I got out of hospital I had a look at the bike. It was a write
off. A stay on the front mudguard (fender) had come loose and engaged
the spokes . Instant stop for the bike ... instant flight
for me.
Never could stand those helmets. I wear one on occasions now.
That was the worst accident. Only ended up in hospital one other
time !
John
|
1047.35 | A Horrendous experience... | RUTLND::PARZIALE | NO_QUESTION_#1 | Wed Apr 12 1989 05:02 | 19 |
| I was riding along a strip of rocky,dusty road on my ATB. Everything
was fine. The weather was warm. The wind was at my back.
Up ahead was a mountain pass which gave me about forty feet on each
side to get through. It was a downhill stretch so I picked up speed.
It felt really good after pedalling over the rough road in the sun.
I got through the pass and felt the cool air in the shadows. It
was a good feeling. Before I had the chance to respond, I felt the
road get bumpy in an odd way. To my surprise, it was train tracks.
My first instinct was to look left, which I did. All I remember
was the front of a train coming right at me.Needless to say, I was
dumbfounded, when all of a sudden it hit me.
I spent the next couple of days waiting for bike repairs before
I could get back to my tour.
All in all, it was worth it.
P.S. Don't try this at home!
|
1047.36 | Are You Superman??? | BTO::MANDILE_A | Just Do It | Wed Apr 12 1989 19:36 | 7 |
| RE:-1
All the train hurt was your bike????????
Musta been the luckiest day of your life!!!!
Albert
|
1047.37 | Montreal '78 | BOOKIE::CROCKER | | Thu Apr 20 1989 13:12 | 38 |
| My best (oops, worst) crash was in the Montreal Grand Prix in '78.
We ran the '76 Olympic Road Race course backwards, which meant we
got to go down the 1.5 mile climb they had to go up. The only problem
was that it was raining. The water mixed with the road residue
to make the course unbelievably slick.
The promoters were cautious enough to run a "pre-race" lap for the
field, where I was forced onto a steel manhole cover in a turn,
and went down. I got up, and since the race hadn't really started
yet, one of the following vehicles told me to grab a door handle,
so they could tow me back up to the field. Hanging on and coasting
at 35-40mph on Montreal streets really got the adrenaline pumping.
I reached the field just as the race started, so instead of doing
the descent at the front, I had to do it behind everyone else.
Pretty scary, watching everyone try to go as fast as they can, but
slipping all over the place.
The field broke up into half a dozen groups, with me at the back.
There was a long climb before the descent, so on each lap I attacked
to make sure I took the descent either at the front of my group
or by myself.
By the seventh lap, I had leapfrogged up to the third group, and
the sun had come out, drying off the roads. I attacked in the usual
spot, left the other members of the third group, and started down.
The second group was in sight, and I was hoping to catch them by
the bottom.
I cut across a corner where an overlooking bluff shaded the left
side of the road. As soon as I hit the shadow, both wheels went
out from under me. I hadn't considered that in the shade, the road
would still be wet. There wasn't much impact, but my momentum caused
me to slide from the left gutter all the way to the right (6 lanes!).
I figured I was going at least 40mph when I started to slide.
Needless to say, there wasn't much skin left on my left side, and
what was left of my shorts was held together by a few threads!
|
1047.38 | A Sunday ride on the Cape | KRAPPA::ROWLEY | | Tue Apr 25 1989 05:38 | 16 |
| One hot summer day at the Cape. I thought a nice time trial run
up the bike path to P-town would be fun. I was going about 24m/hr
on a nice flat smooth bike trail. Not thinking that there would
a big pot hole in the middle of the trail. I was putting my water
bottle back. Before I knew it I was going head over heels. I was
lucky to have my helment on, because that was the first thing that
hit. I riped my short very badly. It looked like I was moonning
everybody. I had blood all over my body. A good case of road rash.
I bent my frame I warped my front tire. I had to open my brakes
to make it back home. I only had one gear that would work. That
was my first crash. I have raced in about twenty or more races without
a crash. Thats what happen with you don't pay close attention at
all time. The rest of my vaction was getting myself back together.
Love my Trek
Mike Norton
|
1047.39 | The bridge is paved. | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue May 23 1989 13:40 | 6 |
| RE: .1 (Chris) and .4 (Jim): That steel grate bridge near Barre Dam on
Rt 62 is now paved over.
Too bad it took some fingers and such before it got rebuilt.
ed
|
1047.40 | Still hurting | JUMBLY::MACFADYEN | A culturally apt response | Fri Sep 22 1989 10:06 | 18 |
| I added to my history of hitting the ground on Tuesday, with quite a
nasty fall.
On the way home, I was coming into Reading town centre, following a bus
and going quite fast. I was looking at the bus so I wouldn't get too
close, reaching down to change, when I hit a badly repaired hole in the
road. Since I had just one hand on the bars I couldn't control the bike
and was pitched off, landing on my side and sliding several metres in
that position. Result: badly grazed right ankle, knee, thigh, hip,
hand, elbow; torn shorts, top and rucksack, scratched handlebars and
brake levers and a bent front brake caliper. Ouch.
I'm going to try and get some recompense from Berks County Council for
failing to keep the road in good repair. Lessons to be learned: cycle
more cautiously?
Rod
|
1047.41 | How do you get the blood stains out? | DRFUSO::SHROYER | | Tue Nov 21 1989 18:04 | 48 |
|
I went for a boys ride Saturday. There was twelve or so at the
beginning. It was a typical ride that started mellow and very quickly turned
fast. The weather started out a little cool, 55 or so, but quickly moved into
the 70's.
Anyway, we regrouped at a bakery after 40 or so miles.....talked about
how tough we were...and then headed back to the start for some "high profiling"
past Stanford. We were running a mellow double paceline (maybe 25 or so)
through some rolling stretches. I happened to be at the front with another guy
and John Pollard, when we heard a scream from behind. We immediately turned
around and say a pile of bikes behind us. Everyone except one guy was getting
up. By the time we got back to this guy and laid our bikes down (probably 30
seconds) he face and chest were covered with blood. I pulled open his jersey
and couldn't find anything wrong around his neck or chest. His right eye was
swollen shut, various cuts, and blood everywhere. He was gurgling (sp?) from
the blood and kept wanting to sit up. We tried to keep him calm and on his
back to keep him from going into shock. About this time, I was really worried
that he was going to drown in his own blood.
Meanwhile, on of the riders stopped the first car and told them to
call an ambulance. A few cars later, a BMW came along with a car phone and
called it in. Luckily, a nurse was out for a bike ride and she stopped to
help. Within ten minutes (which felt like 30), the police, a firetruck and an
ambulance came. They cleaned him up, put him on a breathing machine of some
type, and took him away.
It turns out, that this guy was fairly lucky. He only fractured his
jaw, so he didn't have to get it wired. The plastic surgeons went to work on
him right away to repair as much damage as possible. He lost a front tooth and
moved around a few others. No cheek bones were broken. And the other spots on
his body were mostly road rash type of stuff. He had a cat scan and things
looked good...other than a mild concusion. The accident happened about three
miles from Stanford Hospital. We had been riding in the mountains earlier, and
if it had happened out there, it could have taken 30 or more minutes to get
help.
His name is Jeff Slaney. He works for DEC in the Mt. View plant.
There were some wierd things about this crash. We don't think he hit
anyone's tire. There was a small block of wood on the road that could have
thrown him off a little. He was wearing a helmet, but it wasn't even
scratched. The top of his handle bar tape was scraped across the entire top
of the bar. The only way to accomplish this is to completely flip the bike
straight over the front wheel. He landed directly on his face.
John Pollard and I are ready for shuffle board season.
|
1047.42 | I took a bead on a pine tree... | CSCOA5::HUFFSTETLER | | Wed Nov 22 1989 13:42 | 31 |
| We were MTN biking and the other 2 riders built a good lead on me
going up one hill. I wanted to catch them on the down side of the
hill, so I knew I'd be rolling along pretty good. The trail had a
little "S" motion going down the hill, but everybody knows the
shortest distance is a straight line, so I decided I could go straight
down the hill.
I did ok until I got a little airborne off a hump. When I came down,
my front tire wasn't getting any traction and was bouncing around. I
quit trying to turn so I could steady the bike, but ran out of trail.
I smacked a pine tree about 10" in diameter dead center at the bottom
of the hill. When I knew I was going to hit, I jumped and ended up
going over the handlebars just as the bike was hitting the tree,
did a shoulder roll and slid on my back for about 10 feet where the
trail was.
I laid there for a minute waiting for the bolts of pain to start
shooting through me, but they never came (thank God). I got up and
all the appendages seemed to be in working order - there wasn't even
any blood since I was on dirt. I went back to the bike to check it
out. The front tire was ok as was the rim, but I noticed that the
handlebars seemed to be rotated around 180 degrees. I tried turning
them around, then realized that I'd bent the forks so that the front
wheel was about an inch from the frame. I thought "No problem, I'll
just bend it back out and ride to the bridge," but when I couldn't
budge the forks I realized how hard I'd hit the tree. That spooked me
pretty bad. I was just sitting on the bridge when Doug and Kim came
back to see what happened. They said I had the strangest look on my
face.... �8^O)
Scott
|
1047.43 | Did anyone get the number on that black cat? | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Wed Mar 14 1990 19:12 | 17 |
| Looks like I finally came in first on something. To bad
it had to be first *worst* crash in 1990. This was not my
most serious crash in terms of injury, but the fact that I
was riding my new bike, trying out my new Time pedals (Thanks
Norm). Even a scratch would have been traumatic, let alone
a full 1/2 gainer over the curb landing on my shoulder/back
in front of at least 10 cars waiting for the lights to change.
(Worse than wiping out below the chair lifts when your skiing)
I'm fortunate that the warm weather left the dirt on the other
side of the curb very soft for my digger and unfortunate that the curb
put a mean ding in my rim which took the brunt of the impact. The
only damage to the frame was a ding from the Chorus front brake
bouncing off the down tube. Wow...just two rides and I almost
got to try out Cannondale's frame trade in policy twice in the
same year....make that the same month.
_Jerry
|
1047.44 | Anybody wanna send a card? | 7SIGMA::FISHER | still dis-tneiro-ed | Mon Sep 24 1990 03:25 | 8 |
| Justin may have a new story for us some day. From what I hear,
he's gone down big time, plate in hip, pin in femur.
Justin Crocker
Porter Medical Center
Middlebury, Vermont 05753
ed
|
1047.45 | | EDIT::CRITZ | LeMond Wins '86,'89,'90 TdF | Mon Sep 24 1990 14:42 | 19 |
| I just talked to David Faatz, who originally (I believe)
talked to Ed Fisher about Justin. He gave me Justin's
address (could be his mother's address) in Middlebury:
Justin Crocker
5 Chipman Heights
Middlebury, VT 05753
I'm not sure where Justin is at the moment. For sure, he'll
be home soon. He'd probably appreciate a card or 15.
Coincidentally, I stayed up to midnight:30 this morning watching
a total hip replacement for an older gentleman with arthritis.
The things that modern medicine can do. The program showed the
entire procedure (in living color) from start to finish.
Interesting, to say the least.
Scott
|
1047.46 | Justin's recovery | CSSE32::FAUCHER | | Wed Sep 26 1990 15:55 | 16 |
| Hello,
As a friend of Justin's I'd like to share what I know.
He's currently at the Burlington Hospital in Vermont,
any cards should be sent to his temporary address which
I'll forward per request (CSSE32::Faucher).
I called the hospital and he appears to be in good
spirit. His hip was diagnosed as broken, been operated
on and is recovering. He is determined he'll be back
to normal for next season (6 months) :-)
He had a lot more to tell but I'll let him share the gory
details when he returns...
|
1047.47 | Leader, not a follower! | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Fri Sep 28 1990 12:25 | 10 |
|
My crash in note 900.38. I don't really knows whos 'fault' it was,
not that I even care at this point. I will probably ALWAYS lead from
now on though...
My finger was diagnosed as a Capsular tear and Sagital [sp] band
tear. I had surgery and am now in therapy, 3 months later. What
a depressing Summer :( I hope to be able to hold a ski pole soon.
/mjf
|