View Full Version : sad news in paper last night
rubicon
01-20-2005, 04:06 PM
Two young men duck hunting on Md eastern shore in a canoe got in some rough water and capsized. They found one body and are looking for the other. the guys were both 20 years old.
fabsroman
01-20-2005, 05:09 PM
I think a lot of us tend to forget how unforgiving our sport can be. Of course, I am an avid fisher and cyclist too and those aren't the most forgiving sports either.
Well, I hope they find a person instead of another body.
TreeDoc
01-20-2005, 10:08 PM
I'll assume no life jackets or survival suits? :( :rolleyes:
cycling when you fall off you have more than a minute to get up and out of the january water, i cant tell you how many times i have been in a tiny craft sneaking on birds on big water and had the "what if thought " not to mention if you are close to shore chances are you got a big coat on, maybe waders, very scary situation BE CAREFUL!
kt
fabsroman
01-20-2005, 11:45 PM
KT,
Obviously you aren't a cyclist. Last I checked, I never crashed in water. Heck, I would have preferred that.
Let's see, I wrecked in a race on the ellipse behind the White House. At the time, we were probably going 30 mph. That resulted in a hospital visit. Had two other wrecks like that, but I just stayed home and toughed it out instead of going to the hospital.
What else. Like a moron I was drafting a truck at about 50 mph in the middle of the road. I hit a huge pothole, smashed my face into the handlebar stem when I lost my grip on the handlebars, broke, and I mean broke, both rims and blew out both tires, and lost both water bottles. On that one I was really lucky. Only thing I ended up with was a sore face and a 2 mile walk home (i.e., before the popularity of cell phones).
I have been forced off the side of the road by people driving cars on a couple of occassions, but have always been good enough/lucky enough to make it on the shoulder and/or grass.
Pretty much I had it easy. One of my cycling friends ended up paralyzed from the neck down when he wrecked and broke the vertebrae in his neck during a race. My training partner's father was killed at an off ramp when a motorist ran him over completely. The guy didn't speak English but knew enough to say that he never saw my friend's father, but only realized he had hit something when he felt the bumps.
Quite honestly, death can happen faster on the road on a pedal bike than on the water looking for ducks. I am sure that my buddy's dad would have liked a minute to save his life. Same goes for the guy that hit the asphalt never to walk again.
My motto in life over the past several years has been that if I have to think twice about something, I take precautionary measures. If I happen to think that the dog might eat something in the kitchen, I move it. If I happen to think I might die chasing some ducks, I leave the ducks for somebody else.
If you are ever on big water thinking "what if", you should have stayed home. I am a safety freak and my brothers and sisters give me crap for wearing a life jacket when the boat is moving and requiring my dad, who doesn't know how to swim, to wear a life jacket at all times.
Be safe everyone.
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