A small bike "incident".

Coyote Chris

Site Supporter
Joined
Aug 25, 2011
Messages
2,989
Location
Spokane
Bike
10 Red NT 14 FJR, 17 XT
Once in awhile, Life gives you a dope slap, and hopefully, you recover 100 percent and learn a lesson. And you wish you had the last 30 seconds of your life back. I have had many of these and all but once the doc said, "Boy are you lucky" My bike hurt me, but not too bad. I dont care who you are...if you work outdoors and especially own property and run power equipment over 50 years, you gonna get hurt. See the bike parked properly in the garage? Gonna get it out? Easy peasy. Mount the low side carefully and push it out. Well, three weeks ago, it was leaning the other way and I wanted to move it, so I tried to take my left leg and throw it over the seat and it didnt make it. I stubbled and the bike fell over on me in slow motion. Thankfully, it had roll bars/sliders, as all my bikes do. I fell on my hip and hit my head lightly. The hip hurt but not bad and I went and got a neighbor to help me pick up my bike. I went to the doc a few days later as a small lump had formed on my hip called a contusion, about a 1/4 inch or so high (I will spare you a pic). It hurt but not bad..kind of an ache. I could still walk 6 miles.....the knock to my head didnt make me see stars or knock me out but I felt like it might be a minor concussion...very few symptoms but occasional dizziness. No lump and no sore spot.
After 3 weeks the lump is all but gone on my hip and I barely feel it. He gave me a super anti inflamatory and I could only take it for 5 of the 10 days as the side effects sucked....dizziness, ear ringing...just like taking too much Ibuprofen. My head is fine now also, but you have to be careful with concussions...its the brain hitting the inside of the skull and you dont need another one right away, either. They are cumulative. Most of us have had them and not even known it. I think I got off lucky. 18 months ago I stuck my gloved hand into a wood chipper and it took off half my finger nail. It looks fine now but I lost some nerves...just feels funny. One of those 30 second moments. I move alot slower now at 76.....lets all be careful out there.
1000004190.jpg
 
I also had a driveway incident several months ago. I backed the bike out of the garage, mounted it, then started the engine and tapped the trans into 1st gear. Once I gradually released the clutch lever, I fell over! Still trying to figure out what went wrong. :confused:
 
Exactly why I am considering selling my 650 V-Strom, and replacing it with something MUCH lighter. On the road, it feels light and agile. In the garage, like it weighs a ton.
Glad you have recovered from your “incident”, Chris. We can all learn from your troubles.
 
Yes, need to be careful. I have a big toenail bed messed up after the stitches from a long ago garage incident. When I look at my toe it reminds me to be careful working on stuff. I still do minor damage so maybe I need even more reminders.

Arknt
 
Yikes. It is amazing how fast things can happen. I had a really bad ankle and tibia break years ago walking on frozen slush on a beautiful, clear, early December night here in Northern Minnesota. and 3 years ago popped my achilles hopping over a mud puddle in March. It happens so fast! My wife and I find ourselves taking the ebikes out on the local biking trail more often than our motorcycles these days....no car/truck traffic to deal with, and with a max speed of 20 mph, figure plenty of time to stop when the occasional deer pops up. Just harder to outrun a bear ha! We're in our 60s, and joke that we've learned to appreciate a good handrail too.Glad you're ok!
 
I also had a driveway incident several months ago. I backed the bike out of the garage, mounted it, then started the engine and tapped the trans into 1st gear. Once I gradually released the clutch lever, I fell over! Still trying to figure out what went wrong. :confused:
I have seen others do this. For balance sake, the front wheel should be straight when releasing the clutch, unless we are prepared for the torque vector produced in the situation for us seasoned citizens.
 
Exactly why I am considering selling my 650 V-Strom, and replacing it with something MUCH lighter. On the road, it feels light and agile. In the garage, like it weighs a ton.
Glad you have recovered from your “incident”, Chris. We can all learn from your troubles.
My V storm has launch assist, which is seemless and useful as it keeps the engine from being killed. Perfect beginners bike. Of my 3 bikes, the V strom is the most low speed friendly . But at my age, I have to be careful paddling around any bike....balance deteriorates slowly but it does deteriorate. I am not good at just grabbing the bars and wheeling the bike around while standing besides it. Bikes from the 1960s-2000 had sane seat heights. For some reason, that has gone away. Paddling is hard. You should see the boots that Japanese lady riders wear....huge heals and toes.
 
Yikes. It is amazing how fast things can happen. I had a really bad ankle and tibia break years ago walking on frozen slush on a beautiful, clear, early December night here in Northern Minnesota. and 3 years ago popped my achilles hopping over a mud puddle in March. It happens so fast! My wife and I find ourselves taking the ebikes out on the local biking trail more often than our motorcycles these days....no car/truck traffic to deal with, and with a max speed of 20 mph, figure plenty of time to stop when the occasional deer pops up. Just harder to outrun a bear ha! We're in our 60s, and joke that we've learned to appreciate a good handrail too.Glad you're ok!
Most of us...ok, 90 percent of us....have had incidents like yours....it only take a few bad seconds to ruin the next 6 months. Yet we must live life, too. When I weed wack, I wear an old motorcycle helmet with pull down face shield.
 
Yes, need to be careful. I have a big toenail bed messed up after the stitches from a long ago garage incident. When I look at my toe it reminds me to be careful working on stuff. I still do minor damage so maybe I need even more reminders.

Arknt
The finger I put into a wood chipper is a constant reminder...but I have another one....everytime I think about doing something stoopid, I say to myself, "How bad do you want to go to the emergency room today?"
 
Back
Top Bottom