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I was in the Air Force , stationed at Barksdale near Shreveport. There was a rash of motorcycle crashes so I volunteered to be part of a team that trained and evaluated riders to get permission to ride on base. They sent five of us to take a law enforcement rider class. Two days of accumulated riding intermixed with one day of classroom. You used your own bike and the first time you rode the course was the only time you could hit a cone or go outside the lines or you were done, a failure. It was a tough course but I got a certificate that says I was good for ‘advanced patrol and pursuit’ . One of the Tyler TX cops dumped his Kawasaki police bike on the last test where we had to do some fast crash avoidance work on a sandy parking lot. I rode my hopped up Ambassador. That class saved me a time or two. What I learned is best summed up by a phrase I learned in helicopter aviation: “ you can ball ‘em up but you can’t wad em up”. It’s like a piece of paper, if you ball it up you can straighten it out to be a flat paper again but if you wad it up it’ll be a crumpled mess with some permanent damage. It translates to : do not contact any objects like bumpers, culverts, lite poles etc and you can usually walk away. Ride it out if you can .
The phrase I usually hear is: I had to lay HER down. Both the phrase and the gender assignment just make me think the person is of low intelligence. May or may not be true, but that's the impression it gives me.
I would imagine that could hold true under many circumstances , but , if you've everhad a child race out from between 2 parked cars chasing a ball , only meters from you,well the consequences might be called an accident , no ? Kids and parents in cities canbe kinda scary ! Peter
Wow, people feel pretty strongly about “laying it down”.I take umbrage at the statement that those who say and do this are, weak, unintelligent or other such euphemisms. I take full responsibility for my actions and ended up walking away.Here’s what happened to me if you care to read on;THE SETTINGTwo lane divided roadWarm fall day, no leaves or precipitation on pavementMorning timeClear sky40 mph in a 45 zoneFlint rock on sides of road off elevation from woodsSo, a deer literally jumps out of nowhere into me without warning and limited peripheral site time from the wooded elevationMy options?;A curb at a horrific angleA sign postSidewalkAnd finally landscaping up a significant wallI indeed grabbed the brakes and counter steered The lumbering 750# Triumph Rocket III did not act like a sports bike, imagine my surprise..., and so I did, “lay it down”Result?Broken hand boneRoad rash on left foot as the pavement ground through my riding boots.Everything was replaced at retail;*All my riding gear, yes I was dressed to ride*All of the repairs on the bikeThe deer?He bound offDarn, as it was a nice buck (could’ve made a nice conversation piece on the wall, i.e. Buck by Bike or I hunt with a Triumph...)Anyway I idled home as the throttle cable had snappedI was .5 mile from homeI have relived this, my only road accident in 50+ years of riding and I still see this was my only optionYMMVinditx
Yes inditxSounds like a F*%#-%^ on the Deer's part , you were just collateral Damage ! But , still not an Accident .Which bring to mind the fraise : The "Pregnancy was an Accident" ??? That's clearly not an accident .Up or Down is the only question , but no way being an Accident .
ABS or no?inditx
every time this subject rears its head, it brings to mind an old country song.https://youtu.be/d7FspsAHqfQ