please becareful
#1
#6
#8
RE: please becareful
Im thinkin maybe there were a few things that could of been done to avoid this crash...since all of us who took a MSF class know there are no such things as accidents..im thinking swerve and brake or maybe use the horn or flash your lights or maybe u could of seen the situation sooner by paying more attn to the 12 second scan..my 2 cents but at either rate im glad you are ok.The moto can be fixed..i hope u are planning in taking this young kid who was driving a 50k automobile to court so that he can be held accountable for almost killing you.
Why were u riding so close to the yellow any way....?
Why were u riding so close to the yellow any way....?
#9
RE: please becareful
i had slowed down for cars that where on the side of the road that were stopped for a garage sale. cars were on both sides of the road, this was in a rural area. i was scanning ahead and i didnt see the caddy untill it was in the intersection. in my area we never ride directly in the middle because of the amount of oil in the road(we dont have vehical checks here,so we have alot of beaters that leak all sorts of fluids on the roads), i was just off center to the left, and i did get on the brakes real hard. i had maybe 1 sec time to react. there was an off duty fireman that was at the house where it happened at and he said i did everything i could to avoid it. i had a choice of either tag the drivers side door or lay it down. speed limit was 55 and i was down to 40. i suppose we could debate what i could have done differently or maybe some areas i need to work on as a rider, but i just wanted to remind everyone to keep their eyes open for stupid drivers. if that includes me for failing to do more than i did than so be it.
#10
RE: please becareful
Despite what MSF says, accidents do happen. Sometimes things happen so fast you don't have time to pick up on them. I've nailed birds (in a car) that dove out of the sky from the passenger side, had deer jump onto the road from behind brush and missed them by luck, and cars sitting on the side road of an intersection wait until I'm nearly there and then pull out in front of me. Well, that isn't a good example. I see them and get ready to stop hard, even slowing down a little before getting to the intersection. It's nice to think that with attention to the road and all that's around it we can avoid any collision, but in a small percentage of accidents, we can't.
It's entirely probably that with experience and practice you'll be able to pick up on a dangerous situation sooner, get ready for it sooner, and either brake harder or avoid it. In your case, I'll bet that next time you see a road narrowed by parked cars and an intersection visually blocked you'll slow down more than you did this time and maybe even move to your right a little. With practice you'll find that even in an emergency situation you'll squeeze the brakes on rather than slam them on and modulate them better, enabling you to stop more quickly. You can take comfort in the fact that all of us sitting in front of our computers typing out advice might just have done exactly what you did. It's real easy to quarterback from the easy chair. Not so easy to do it on the road.
Congratulations on surviving one of life's lessons. They're so darned hard because the test comes before the teaching.
It's entirely probably that with experience and practice you'll be able to pick up on a dangerous situation sooner, get ready for it sooner, and either brake harder or avoid it. In your case, I'll bet that next time you see a road narrowed by parked cars and an intersection visually blocked you'll slow down more than you did this time and maybe even move to your right a little. With practice you'll find that even in an emergency situation you'll squeeze the brakes on rather than slam them on and modulate them better, enabling you to stop more quickly. You can take comfort in the fact that all of us sitting in front of our computers typing out advice might just have done exactly what you did. It's real easy to quarterback from the easy chair. Not so easy to do it on the road.
Congratulations on surviving one of life's lessons. They're so darned hard because the test comes before the teaching.