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[personal profile] pecunium
For getting around I have a scooter (the budget, right now, even with some help from [personal profile] commodorified, [profile] iclysdale and my folks wasn't quite up to what a bike size/type is going to run). It's a decent means of transportation, and the locals in Moutain View, Santa Cruz and points between are pretty aware/considerate (well, there was the ass who was tailing me about four car lengths behind, for about a half mile, who decided to speed up the moment I hit the blinker to get over to the left turn lane, but if I've learned anything from riding in the past 26 years it's that people in cars are often nasty to people on two wheels).

It's a 2008, and the shop overstocked when the price of gas was up around $4. The price came down and they had too many, so it was going out the door for about 30 percent of list.

It'll do 67 (there is a chunk of the road from MV to Aptos which is shared highway). It's of questionable legality on the freeway (it's called a 150cc, which is the cut-off, but the specs are for 149.7), but I have no interest in using it there. It climbs the 1/3 of a mile of 12 percent grade without any problem.

I'm not unfamiliar with motorcycles, but it's been 20 years since I was using one at all regularly. Which is why I got into minor trouble. I was making a right on red when the oncoming left turn lane was activated. A white SUV decided to barrel off the line and I flinched.

When I flinched I was slightly canted, and doing about 3 mph. I made the mistake of cutting the wheel some, in a vain attempt to tighten the turn, which dropped the bike. She went straight over and skidded, just enough to make some superficial scratches to the fairing.

Me, I was embarrassed. My knee took a knock, my right arm went out to break the fall. Either I hit the kill switch, or something bumped it. Haul the bike up (about 300lbs, between the dry weight, 2 gallons of gas and the books/computer in the cargo netting on the back, and my camera rig under the seat), get it started and off I go. I look at my knee, the pants aren't torn. At the next stop I look at my boot, no damage. My knee ached, but I'd just bounced a lot of plastic coverd metal off of it.

Five miles later I stopped at a gas station to check my map (It was my first trip from Mountain View to Aptos on it), and pulled my pants up to look at my knee and see if it was swelling.

It was, too a manner of speaking. I had a fishook shaped tear in it, about two inches by one. I called CG and told her I was coming back to her place to get a ride to the ER at the Palo Alto VA. What's amazing (as I look at something that appears to want 6-8 stitches) is there is no blood on my jeans, not a drop.

She looks at traffic (God I love technology) and we decide it won't be any faster for her to come get me than it will be for me to get to her place, so I should head back. I promise to pay attention to my pain, and my attentiveness, and stop if I start hurting too much, or losing focus.

I open the seat, take out a bandage (don't leave home without them. I'd thought of leaving it in my camera bag, but didn't. While I'm doing that, it starts to bleed. I lift my jeans, realise I am not going to be able to get the bandage on with the pants pulled up, so I undo my belt, stand there in my boxers and leather jacket and get it wrapped.

Start it up, and head back. It hurts. It hurts more because I wasn't really paying attention when I closed up the bandage, which has a plastic bar-clip to keep it shut, and the clip was across the inside edge of my knee, which put pressure on it when bent. I needed to get over from foothill to Central Expressway, and took Grant... which turns into Calif. 237... a freeway.

I opened the throttle all the way (getting her up to 63. I didn't know she takes premium; the manual isn't included, and the online source is 404), and bailed at the first opportunity (which was the street I wanted).

Got back to CG's. She was out getting some cabbage rolls and kvass from Samovar, a local Russian deli/market/store. I called [personal profile] commodorified, got told it wasn't a damnfool thing to do (which I knew, but it's still nice to be reassured), and got grilled about whether the helmet had so much as touched the ground. She didn't realise it had been at least 30 minutes since I'd dropped the bike, so she was a little more aggressive about grilling me than the would have been (she was right to be aggressive. Helmets are good for one (1),and only 1 (one) fall. Be they bicycle, motorcycle, or horse; they are good for one (1) use only).

Get into the car and head to VA. See the nice nurse. Discover I am presently about 115 lbs, my BP is up, my O2 saturation is fine, and my pulse is a little fast. Big surprise. She looks at the wound, gets the details, and we wait for the doctor.

They come get me, then they take me to x-ray (four films), where the radiologist and I chat about arthritis (she has RA, and is on Remicade). Go back to the treatment room and wait. CG asks how I feel. I say I ache some. She goes away. In about ten minutes the nurse comes and he gives me some vicodin. The doc comes in (they have one attending, and 22 beds, he was good, attentive, patient and overworked). Asks about pain, we tell him about the vicodin. He looks at it, has a nurse come and irrigate it. That stings.

He comes back, tells me it will take two stitches. I express some, dopey, surprise. He tells us the longer wound is superficial, and mere adhesion will do, but the "corner" is deep, and it needs to be sewn up.

I yelp, and gasp, my way through the lidocaine (it burns me when it goes in), and CG watches as he sews me up; all I feel is a numb tugging. It was about 0200 when we got out, so we'd been there about 5 1/2 hours.

Things I'd do differently:

1: Stop at the next opportunity to look at my leg.
2: Do a better job of bandaging myself up. It was shoddy work.
3: Have taken a route home I better knew. I don't think trying to cut up Grant saved me any time, and not knowing it turned into the freeway could have been really bad.

Things I did right:

1: Got the bike up, and out of the semi-blind spot of the corner
2: Called someone as soon as I knew I was hurt.
3: Put a plan of action into motion.

Things that helped: 26 years of riding a bicycle, in traffic. A couple of years of intermittent riding of mopeds and small motorcycles. Having power (and 150cc will move 425 lbs of me, gear, and stuff to 20 mph fast enough to be clear of the intersection before the cars next to/behind me are across), makes it a lot easier to keep track of the surroundings.

All Gear, All The Time. I had boots, a motorcycle jacket, helmet and metal studded gloves. The only damage (apart from my knee; which was bitten by a "feature" of the bike (a spring-loaded U-clip to hand one's helmet from) was one of the studs on the heel of the glove caught a bit of pavement and there is a right angle tear, about 1/4" x 1/4", and a bit of scuffing on the inside toecap of my right boot.

I pulled some muscles in my left arm (I was trying to hold 300 lbs of bike... ain't gonna happen), and I needed two stitches. If I'd been in sneakers, wearing a shirt, without gloves, wearing shorts (or any arrangement of that sort of things), I'd've been a lot worse off. This was a "nothing" wreck. Slow, low, and simple.

Move it one foot to the right, and my head hits the curb, so I need the helmet.

I've been looking at the gear the other scooter riders are wearing (as with anything I see more scooters now than I did before I had one; I can't tell if I am more aware of bikes, or there are more here. I know that I've always been attentive to them, I wonder if I mistook some scooter for bike in the past), and most of them are wearing 3/4 helmets, and gloves.

Me... Nope. I take it up to 35-40 miles an hour, as a matter of course. That's too fast for bare skin, or mere cotton, to meet the road. I don't know if I'll wear chaps all the time, but if I'm wearing slacks, not denim, the chaps go on (the only reason I didn't have them on is they are too large in the waist, and I haven't taken them in yet).

I've gotten some nods from guys on motorcycles. I've gotten some funny looks from guys on scooters, I don't know if that's because the former think I'm taking it seriously, and the latter think I'm over the top, but that's sort of how it feels.

In any case, I'm not going to stop putting it on, any time I think about skipping some of it, I'll have a scar to remind me.

Date: 2009-08-09 03:29 am (UTC)
ext_3319: Goth girl outfit (Default)
From: [identity profile] rikibeth.livejournal.com
Glad you're not more seriously hurt!

I still have my mesh-and-armor summer jacket, and a pair of gloves, from when I was dating a fellow who had a bike. (I used his spare helmet.) I've been daydreaming about scooters -- I have an ideal scooter commute, back roads with very few stoplights, too hilly for a bicycle at my current level of fitness -- and between your accident and a friend of mine who damaged her knee, I know I'd be serious about the gear.

Date: 2009-08-09 03:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
I'll probably get an armor jacket (as much because the jacket is black, and I want bright. CG thought I had a strange fetish for yellow when we were looking at bikes. She finally asked and I said, "They're visible.").

Scooters are way fun. They are a little less work than a motorcycle, but still take more maintanence than a car.

Date: 2009-08-09 03:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ironphoenix.livejournal.com
Good thinking, and I'm glad you're mostly okay after teh incident!

Date: 2009-08-09 03:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowcat48li.livejournal.com
wow... now I dont feel quite so silly for going full coverage helmet, pants, gloves, and boots on my 49cc Honda Spree many years ago. pulled up at a light on it and realized the guy on the great big Harley in next lane over was a guy I worked with, and he was wearing a snoopy helmet and goggles... so I beeped the horn at him and gunned the engine, the look on his face was priceless. those little hondas were great for around the neighborhood or a college campus, but probably suicidal in anything resembling real traffic.

Date: 2009-08-09 03:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
Never feel silly for protective gear. It's not that you are a "sissy" it's that other people are less worried. They may be right, but I'd rather be repairing my jacket than my elbow, and my faceshield than my eyes.

One of the things I don't understand is the people who don't wear full face helmets, and don't wear goggles. The wind in my eyes is really distracting.

Date: 2009-08-09 03:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] saoba.livejournal.com
Good gear can be the difference between 'oops' and 'oh shit'. And amen on the one-hit rule on helmets.

We have a name for the flip-flop and shorts wearing scooter drivers- in our house we call them patients and we figure Himself will eventually see them at his place of employment.

I'm glad you're not banged up any worse, though of course I'd rather you weren't banged up at all.

Date: 2009-08-09 03:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
Between me, Maia, and her mother we've swapped out sixx helmets in the past eight years; for hits.

I'm probably walking today, instead of using a powered wheelchair because I was wearing one. Maia was really worried when she came back and I was (some 30 seconds later), still lying in a heap checking the circuits for full function.

I'd done an unintended dismount over his shoulder and landed on head and shoulder, with my body piledriving into me.

Date: 2009-08-09 04:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kristine-smith.livejournal.com
I'm glad you wear a helmet. I've lost track of the number of cyclists I see on the roads around here who wear no safety gear whatsoever. They ride in jeans, a t-shirt, sneakers. It's scary.

Date: 2009-08-09 04:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
Calif. has a helmet law for scooters/motorcycles.

I'd have been ticketed half a dozen times before that happened.

Bicylists get a bye, if they are over 18. I can't imagine not wearing one, but that's me.

Date: 2009-08-09 04:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] don-fitch.livejournal.com
Yeah, scars are useful reminders. But... try not to acquire any larger ones, eh?

Date: 2009-08-09 04:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
I'd rather not have it, but since I do...

Date: 2009-08-09 04:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] julia-here.livejournal.com
Jesus, Terry. That's scarey, the getting home part, but then I remember getting back on my new ten speed, riding home with one of my more miserable concussions and then puking all nightafterward. Helmets are good, but back in the seventies even motorcycle ones were sort of radical, in these parts.

Julia, most of the bikers I know have had at least one compound fracture, but my whole family is ADHD as hell

Date: 2009-08-09 04:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
I went without a helmet when I was a teen, and probably got a couple of concussions.

But for motorcycle... Ohio had a mandatory helmet law in the '70s, and even if it hadn't I'd have believed in them. A friend of ours had been, indirectly, in a Bell ad. He was heading home, back country road, when someone with no lights (probably drunk), hit him; head on.

He woke to the sun in his face, with a nasty headache, and looked about. His helmet was still on his head. He took it off, and it had a huge dent in it, which matched the rock under his head.

Bell asked if he minded the helmet being used in an ad, he said no, and they sent him a new helmet. Among other places the ad ran in Playboy.

The first time I ever went down on a bike was going laps around the house (dirt trail) as a passenger; about 7 years old. We had one child's helmet, and it was swapped around as we took turns (the bike went down because some grass got under the rear wheel in a turn.

Date: 2009-08-09 05:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] julia-here.livejournal.com
I've had three major concussions, the sort which need watched over: having my new bike handle collapse and dump me over the front wheel was the last of them, and the only one which was soley my own fault. And it would have been prevented by a helmet, was, in fact, the kind of bicycle injury helmets are meant to prevent.

Scooter riders have somehow got the miss-impression that they can wear shorts and flip-flops on their tiny underpowered rides, which just scares me when I see them on the road.

Julia, having grown up clumsy gives me hypervigilence for the multitudes.

Date: 2009-08-09 05:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
The mistake is they think them underpowered. It's more a case of motorcycles are overpowered/powered for different things.

A 50cc scooter will do 30 mph. That's power. F=MA Motorcycle, car, scooter, bicycle. Dumping at 30 is bad.

Date: 2009-08-09 06:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] feonixrift.livejournal.com
This is also why I cringe at people treating coasting downhill on a bicycle as no big deal. I flipped over the handlebars going 30 on a downhill, onto my head, with no helmet once. They told me that given the shape my sunglasses were in after (scraped halfway through the lens) and the amount of skinning on the rest of my face, I was lucky to still have my right eye. Along with, y'know, somehow not having broken my neck despite buckling over myself trying to use my face as a friction brake. If I'm not armored, I want to be going slow enough to roll.

Date: 2009-08-09 06:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] julia-here.livejournal.com
I went over my handlebars braking at 20mph or so; I've seen a bicyclist blow through Lake Washington Blvd and Madison in Seattle coming north/west off the hill on Madison going over 30 mph in a 15mph environment; we were pulling out of a side-road in the Arboretum and the rider almost smacked into the side of our van before she could stop. The human body is designed to walk away from most impacts of around 15mph; anything past that takes skill and technology.

My dad, who rode motorcycles and horses and drove log trucks (and fuel trucks in Europe from 12 June 1944 to VE day) taught me to think about how fast I was getting myself into trouble- on a bike, or a 14 foot aluminum salmon fishing boat with a merc outboard- and to think about the cone of hazard that goes in front of a moving object. Life has taught me that physics, especially gravity and inertia, never stops paying attention.

Julia, or, as I told my kids when they were learning to cross the street: you are small and soft and slow and squishy, and cars are big and fast and hard: Never forget that.

Date: 2009-08-09 07:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
I refer to myself as "crunchy".

I've seen cyclists get speeding tickets; Calif. doesn't say, 'The speed limit for things with motors,' it says "the speed limit."

Back in the late '80s there were some kids training themselves to luge with modified skateboards down Mullholland. They made the news when the CHP issued them tickets for doing in excess of 50 mph in a 35 zone.

They weren't completely stupid:

They were going with traffic.
They were on a sparsely travelled section of the highway, and at non-peak times.
They were wearing safety gear (leathers and helmets).

They replaced their brakes every three or four stops (they were using sneakers from thrift-stores).

But... they were really fast (though low to the ground, which makes a big difference, it's a big part of why bikers have lower leg injuries much more than they do upper body), and they were pretty much invisible (the same thing which makes them safer from impact injury, made them more likely to be unseen.
Edited Date: 2009-08-09 07:30 pm (UTC)

Date: 2009-08-09 07:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] feonixrift.livejournal.com
Some crazy folks at Caltech used to do what they called a "lake run" -- bicycle as fast as they could, generally with no safety gear at all, down Lake avenue in the middle of the night. The whole thing is a giant hill, some of them clocked over 100mph. I'm amazed that noone died doing that.

Date: 2009-08-09 09:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
I find it hard to believe (not impossible, mind you, but hard to believe) they got much past 75, just because the way air mass friction works.

I know Lake, and I assume they started around the curve in Alta Dena.

Somewhere around 60 MPH, they lose the ability to add speed with the gears, and the guys on the Tour de France don't usually get much above 60 mph on the long downhills.

Lake just isn't steep enough to get that fast.

Date: 2009-08-09 11:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] feonixrift.livejournal.com
It wouldn't surprise me if their speedometers had been set up wrong, or the numbers misquoted to me.

Date: 2009-08-09 05:23 am (UTC)
geekchick: (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekchick
Glad that you're (for the most part) okay.

Date: 2009-08-09 06:23 am (UTC)
soon_lee: Image of yeast (Saccharomyces) cells (Default)
From: [personal profile] soon_lee
Yikes! Glad it wasn't more serious.

Date: 2009-08-09 07:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] starcat-jewel.livejournal.com
Oy. I want a scooter for short-run errands around the neighborhood, but I'm looking at the ones that don't require a motorcycle endorsement (and therefore can't be driven on the freeway). Houston is fairly friendly to bikes and scooters -- our mayor, Bill White, is a big supporter -- but as you note, there are always assholes. I'm glad you're (mostly) okay.

Date: 2009-08-09 07:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
Calif. has two classes of motorcycle endorsement: Scooters require the lesser.

The only things which don't require an endorsement is a vehicle of less than 50cc, which has the ability to be human powered.

Date: 2009-08-09 10:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] niamh-sage.livejournal.com
All Gear, All The Time.

This is so, so important. There are very many scooter riders around here, and it's rare to see them wearing helmets or any kind of protective clothing. I've seen way too many motorcyclists in shorts, unsuitable shoes and t-shirts. Cycling helmets are rare too. We never go out without ours, and we bought one for Emrys even before we got his bike seat.

I'm really glad you weren't too badly hurt.

Date: 2009-08-09 02:18 pm (UTC)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
From: [personal profile] redbird
I'm glad you're basically OK, and yay for good gear. The one serious fall I've ever taken, I hurt my head [I am now more careful about the gap, but I am not going to start wearing a helmet to ride commuter rail]; my hand was fine, because the gloves I was wearing to stay warm took the damage.

Date: 2009-08-09 02:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mesoterica.livejournal.com
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience on this! My husband's been dreaming of buying a motorcycle for a long time now; after reading what you have to say, I'll be on his case to get all the proper safety gear if he ever does get the bike.

Date: 2009-08-09 05:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com
The jacket, good boots, good gloves, chaps/leathers/heavy jeans, are all nice.

The piece you can't do without, is the helmet. Take a day, and go shopping, ideally with someone who knows them. Go to more than one shop. Different heads have different shapes, and makers have forms. I can't wear a Bell, or a Shoei, my head is too narrow. I can wear some Arai, but the cheapest Arai I can wear is 400 bucks... the one which fit best (of what the shop had) was 700.

So I have a Scorpion.

I can send you a breakdown of how motorcyclists get hurt. Mostly, we damage our legs; if we are wearing helmets. If we aren't, we die. If we don't die we have traumatic brain and neck injuries.

All Gear, All The Time.

Date: 2009-08-10 03:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dianyla.livejournal.com
Longtime road cyclist and sometime dirtbiker, just chiming in to agree with the "All Gear, All the Time" and nodding my head vigorously.

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