Author Topic: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...  (Read 5998 times)

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Offline Pinhead

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #50 on: October 16, 2009, 06:03:18 PM »
I wasn't in my bike for this one, thank God.

Racing a guy in my '83 Chevy Caprice on Old Hwy 40 between two small towns out in central KS, about 6 miles. A ways out I was about 4 car lengths ahead of him but it looked like he was gaining. I was looking too close at him to watch ahead closely; checked my mirrors to see exactly where he was, and then WHAM! The entire right side of the car bounced about 3 feet in the air. I obviously quickly got 'er woah'd. As it turns out, there was a limestone post laying about a foot into the road, with grass hiding the other 6 feet of it. I hit it so hard that it busted the front rim in half and the front speakers came out of the dash!!



THAT is what I hit, though it was laying on it's side.
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Offline HondaMan

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #51 on: October 16, 2009, 08:11:57 PM »
I've had several: there are 3 minor ones that stand out for me, both on my 750K2:

first one was in 1973, when the Year of the 17-year Locust occurred in Missouri. I had ridden down to my old stomping grounds (farm) to see the devastation all around from them, and was heading north, just south of Moberly, about 65 MPH. I came around a sweeping curve (the road was deserted on this Thursday afternoon), right into a giant, black, thick cloud of the 3" to 4" long critters that were flying across the road as far as I could see to both sides: tens of thousands of them! I held the throttle, hoping to just power through them, and ducked down behind my Vetter, but the bike started slowing. I pulled up power, but could not get above 45 MPH and it seemed to go on for about 20-25 seconds, just unimaginable how many of them there were! When I busted through, I was only going about 40 MPH and had dropped to 3rd, trying to build speed, so I shot out of the cloud, accelerating. But the dang things were everywhere: and the windscreen was opaque, they were in my helmet, neck, up my sleeves, in my jacket... I decided I needed to stop to get the stupid things off of me, and the bike suddenly just quit, so I coasted to a stop on the [1 foot wide] shoulder, hoping to get off the road in case someone came by in a blinded car, and pushed the bike off into the field. The whole of the front of the bike was 2-4 bodies deep, and the engine had overheated to make it stop (I had been hotrodding up that hiway, all by myself, pushing 7K most of the way...). There must have been 100 in my clothes, most still alive, and about 8 or 9 INSIDE my helmet, somehow. That less-than-a-minute of my life still lives over and over.  :o

Another was the night I was riding home from work on a local street here in Lakewood, about 30 MPH, when a car full of highschool kids coming the other way pitched a beer bottle at me: it came right inside the fairing and hit me in the left chest, almost taking me off the bike! I was going to whip around and chase them down, but it hurt so badly that I just decided to pull over and hope they would come back to see, so I could kick their asses, I was so pissed. They didn't: I had a bruise over a foot long and 8 inches wide for almost 2 weeks from it.

One fine morning I was blitzing to work in heavy traffic on the local freeway called 6th Avenue. I was in my usual "slot", the right side of the leftmost lane, running about 60+, when the gaggle of cars I was leading (on purpose, I usually do that, or get behind the crowd, not in the midst) came up eastbound onto the Wadsworth hill. About 80 feet in front of me, all traffic was dead stopped (you could not see over this hill until you are on top of it, short and steep in the early 1970s: now regraded flatter). I began to nail the brakes when I realized that there were at least 10 cars right behind me: so I split the next lane over and THEN hit the brakes, ending up between the 4th cars up: the next sounds were very loud as the spot I would have been in became 3 cars occupying the same physical location. Turned out, someone's dog was out running about on the freeway about a half mile ahead, and the (then) gentle-minded Coloradans had all stopped until the dog found his way off the road. It wasn't so good for a lot of cars behind me, that day, though.

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Offline my78k

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #52 on: October 16, 2009, 08:25:21 PM »
Last summer I was riding home from a buddy's place after the Friday the 13th Rally in Port Dover. I was buzzing along the highway at about 130-140 or so (km/h) and was catching up on a van with a trailer. Had one of those gut feel things and backed off a bit and sure enough the f'ing trailer starts to sway like crazy and more or less tips up side ways spewing everything across the road (all 4 lanes) and I was able to dodge around all sorts of crap from cushions (wouldn't hurt too bad I guess) to a TV (now that woulda sucked!!!) Nothjing like panic stops/emergency swerves on one of the busiest highways in Canada. Fortunately it was fairly early on the Saturday morning so not too much traffic.

Ever since then I absolutely despise following trailers...especially the more rickety home made looking ones and will break any and speed limits to get the hell outta there.

Dennis

Offline mystic_1

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #53 on: October 16, 2009, 08:33:20 PM »
first one was in 1973, when the Year of the 17-year Locust occurred in Missouri. I had ridden down to my old stomping grounds (farm) to see the devastation all around from them, and was heading north, just south of Moberly, about 65 MPH. I came around a sweeping curve (the road was deserted on this Thursday afternoon), right into a giant, black, thick cloud of the 3" to 4" long critters that were flying across the road as far as I could see to both sides: tens of thousands of them! I held the throttle, hoping to just power through them, and ducked down behind my Vetter, but the bike started slowing. I pulled up power, but could not get above 45 MPH and it seemed to go on for about 20-25 seconds, just unimaginable how many of them there were! When I busted through, I was only going about 40 MPH and had dropped to 3rd, trying to build speed, so I shot out of the cloud, accelerating. But the dang things were everywhere: and the windscreen was opaque, they were in my helmet, neck, up my sleeves, in my jacket... I decided I needed to stop to get the stupid things off of me, and the bike suddenly just quit, so I coasted to a stop on the [1 foot wide] shoulder, hoping to get off the road in case someone came by in a blinded car, and pushed the bike off into the field. The whole of the front of the bike was 2-4 bodies deep, and the engine had overheated to make it stop (I had been hotrodding up that hiway, all by myself, pushing 7K most of the way...). There must have been 100 in my clothes, most still alive, and about 8 or 9 INSIDE my helmet, somehow. That less-than-a-minute of my life still lives over and over.  :o

You win!   :D

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Offline The_Crippler

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #54 on: October 17, 2009, 01:19:32 AM »
You win!   :D

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Offline Redman

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #55 on: October 17, 2009, 05:02:45 AM »
Critters....
  Years ago I was blasting thru some nice twisties and as I was cornering a hard left I hit a Snapping Turtle that was in the middle of the road. Luckily, I hit it straight on and bounced a couple of feet in the air, came down, did some squirrley moves but managed not to go down. I went straight home and changed my pants.

Offline phrige

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #56 on: October 17, 2009, 01:16:11 PM »
Again this was not on a bike but, a few years ago I was driving home on Garden State Parkway. Just went on a nice date with a girl I had just met. So pretty happy with the way things went, life was good, im cruising and traffic is at its usual.  A decent amount of people, but not too heavy. Moving well as it usually does on a Cold February Night. Im doin about 70 in the middle lane in my Lincoln Sedan, and i see the guy in front me me's brake lights light up. I let off the gas, to see some wild and huge object laying pretty flat in the middle of the road. S#*T! I'm boxed in and have no were to swerve, not that this honkin vehicle would be able to make it as it is. (it was a 2000 LS) I Go RIGHT OVer what my lights show me is SOMEONES CAR DOOR..... I cant believe it. I cant believe what I just saw, and the CLUNKING as it beats up my undercarraige is terrible. I was really worried that something would get ripped or torn. Luckily im all in one piece, and as i drive a 1/4 mile up i see this guy standing next to his 2 seater, Lexusy styled coupe, with the passenger door missing! The Drivers door had that stupid ass suicided Lamborgini style where they open up. ...well i guess Mr. shade tree mechanic forgot to tighten the bolts on that one...

luckily from what i saw every one who was driving over/past it was alright, people started to catch on that there was something there.
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Offline Steve F

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #57 on: October 17, 2009, 01:32:19 PM »
Back in 2006, I had this encounter:
http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=10460.0

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Offline BobbyR

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #58 on: October 17, 2009, 01:47:27 PM »
I borrowed a pimped out Mercedes from friend of mine in the 1980s while my Pontiac was in the shop(a long story). This friends is a car parts importer so this was his demo car with all the pimp/drug dealer ground effects, SPAX Shocks, all kinds of suspension mods, and wheels with low profile Perrellis. This all has a point.

I was coming back from a wedding in the Hamptons in Long Island at about 2:30 am. I was on the Long Island Expressway middle lane at somewhere about 75 mph. In the middle of the road is a wooden bed box spring about 25 feet in front of me. I cranked the wheel the little sucker got me around it and back in my lane with no wobbling. The G force was so great it tossed my Wife and Mother around like rag dolls. In my Pontiac or anything I have owned since I would have hit it and frigged up the car.

I told my friend about the incident and he told me a mutual friend who runs Formula cars tricked out the suspension. I had them do the work on my son's Camaro. It has a small engine, but that sucker can corner.  
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But we were boys, and boys will be boys, and so they will. To us, everything was dangerous, but what of that? Had we not been made to live forever?

Offline SohRon

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #59 on: October 17, 2009, 02:52:48 PM »
I apologize for this going on so long, but this subject has a lot do with my relationship with bikes these days. Please bear with me.

The worst "obstacle" story I have came when a buddy and I were heading up into the mountains late one night; he was on a full-dress Harley Electra Glide and I was riding a CL350 Scrambler (kind of like Mutt and Jeff...). We were stopped at a stop sign on a county road. The road we were taking did a little jog to the left as it crossed the main highway and continued up into the hills.

My friend started out on his Harley, crossed the road, made the jog, then headed out. I was right behind him on the '350. Of course, being twenty-one or so we laid on the gas leaving the stop sign, and, even though I had only traveled a few yards, I was probably approaching 30MPH or more when I hit the edge of a pothole that my friend had just barely missed. In the dark, and with the way the road was offset, it was impossible to see it until you were right on top of it.

The bike took off like a rocket, hit the pavement, oscillated right, then left, and when it went right again I knew it was going to go down. The only thing I could think of (wearing nothing but jeans and a denim jacket) was that if I hit the pavement I was going to be in a world of hurt; and that, rather than me, I should try to let the bike take as much of the damage as possible. In the last moment, I gave an effort and managed to pull myself across the bike as it went down. There was a loud bang, a screech of scraping, tearing metal, and the bike spouted a rooster tail of sparks that streamed out behind it as it careened down the road. Straight towards a set of car lights fast approaching in the opposite lane. All I could think of was staying with the bike, hoping that I wasn't about to be involved in a double crash. I mean, really. To lay your bike down and then get run over by a car just didn't seem fair. I finally ground to a halt and lay there in the middle of the road in a cloud of dirt and smoke. The car pulled up, stopped. The driver rolled down his window, looked at me and shook his head. "Wow, man," he said. "That was really spectacular!"

I got the impression that he wanted me to do it again.

He asked me if I was alright, or if I needed help, but just at that moment my friend pulled up on the Harley. I got up, shook myself over, and realized that, for the most part, I was in one piece, though my right elbow and knee were starting to smart. We thanked the driver for his offer of help and he drove off.

The '350 was in pretty rough shape, although the engine was still running. I switched it off and we got the bike up on its wheels. In the light from the Harley's headlight, we could see that the bars were misaligned and bent, the rear passenger peg was ground down and there was major road rash along the entire right side of the bike from headlight to rear fender. Amazingly, the wheels seemed to be okay.

It was then we realized that I wasn't okay. "Hey, man," he said, "I think we need to get you to the emergency room. Look at your knee!" I looked. It had been ground flat on one side and was beginning to bleed copiously. I thought I could see a little glimpse of bone, and it was starting to hurt like hell. I looked at my elbow and it was pretty much in the same state. We stashed the Honda on the side of the road and he drove me to the local hospital, which, fortunately, was located just a few miles away.

I was admitted and sent back to an examination room. An emergency nurse came in, looked at the mess, then came back with a nylon scrub brush that looked like an overgrown fingernail brush. "Sorry, honey; I'm afraid we're a little short staffed tonight, and very busy. Use this brush to clean the gravel out of it, and I'll be right back".

I said, "can't you give it something to stop the pain?". She shook her head. "The damage is too extensive. There's nothing we can do right now. Just get that gravel out of there."

She left, and I started   picking at the dirt with one of the bristles on the brush. This sucked. Did she really expect me to dig into that hamburger with that brush? Was she nuts? Each tiny little stone was pure agony. After about five minutes, and three or four pieces of gravel extracted, she returned.

"Haven't made much progress, have we?"

I looked at her. "This hurts like hell. It covers what's left of my kneecap!"

She took the brush from me. "This is nothing," she said. "We get guys in here that have slid down the road on their backs. Now, that's a mess." And with that, she took the brush and began attacking the knee with vigor, like she was scrubbing melons or something.

It was the first (and only) time that I went out like a light.

I got the bike back into running condition (it's nearly impossible to kill one of those old 350 twins) and continued to ride it through the summer. I hadn't learned my lesson, unfortunately, and I laid it down again several more times, mainly due to stupidity and recklessness on my part. It was fortunate that all were minor accidents, and I never really hurt myself again, but when I got on that bike I turned into a raving maniac who lived for speed and ignored the danger. It was after I almost slid off of 12,000 foot Independence pass taking a curve too fast that I finally came to my senses. I realized that I had no business riding a motorcycle, and that I was likely to kill myself if I continued like this. It wasn't just a case of thinking, "I'll have to ride more carefully". Having that power and speed available to me on such a light vehicle brought out the Jekyll and Hyde in me. I wouldn't have lasted two seconds on one of today's modern crotch-rockets.

It helped that I was due to start College in Berkley that fall. My friend let me stash the bike in an old warehouse his father owned and I left for school. Once in California, I bought an old VW van that I drove to death. I stayed in CA. after I graduated, and it wasn't 'til eight years later that I returned to Colorado. By then, the warehouse and bike were gone. My friend had tried to reach me but, once out of school, I had just wandered for a while with no permanent address, and was impossible to find. He didn't have any room for it, so the bike went bye-bye. Probably just as well...

Fast forward twenty-nine years. I haven't touched, ridden or even sat on a motorcycle since the day we locked the 350 up in the warehouse, but the bug has never left me. So, one day, I bought an old CB550 to restore. In my mid 50s now, I hope I can trust myself to be a little more cautious with one of these things.

But, you know... sometimes at night, when everything's quiet and I'm just sitting in the garage smoking and staring at the bike, dreaming of what it will be like to take it out onto the road... there comes this little flutter of something deep down inside of me that feels faintly familiar and vaguely wild, like an old friend you haven't seen for a while...

I'll keep you posted.
« Last Edit: October 18, 2009, 09:21:24 AM by SohRon »
"He slipped back down the alley with some roly-poly little bat-faced girl..."

Assembling my '74 CB550: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=86697.0
Assembly of the Right-hand Switch (a rebuilder's guide):  http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=80532.0
Installing stock 4X4 exhaust: CB500-CB550 K: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=82323.0
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Offline BobbyR

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #60 on: October 17, 2009, 03:57:43 PM »
I would imagine that you now realize you are not immortal. Live the dream Brother, it is last call for old bastids like us.
Dedicated to Sgt. Howard Bruckner 1950 - 1969. KIA LONG KHANH.

But we were boys, and boys will be boys, and so they will. To us, everything was dangerous, but what of that? Had we not been made to live forever?

Offline Bob Wessner

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #61 on: October 17, 2009, 04:29:05 PM »
Just ride like you want to see tomorrow rather than like there is no tomorrow.  ;)
We'll all be someone else's PO some day.

Offline Don R

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #62 on: October 17, 2009, 04:31:36 PM »
Well, if no one else will say it, I will. Pinhead, shame on you for street racing. ::)
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Offline Pinhead

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #63 on: October 17, 2009, 04:33:06 PM »
Well, if no one else will say it, I will. Pinhead, shame on you for street racing. ::)

 :P  ;D
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Offline SohRon

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #64 on: October 17, 2009, 05:48:58 PM »
Quote
I would imagine that you now realize you are not immortal

Right on. Though I'm not sure that's exactly it. More like live fast and die young, if you know what I mean.

Quote
Just ride like you want to see tomorrow rather than like there is no tomorrow.

Excellent advice!
« Last Edit: October 17, 2009, 06:05:29 PM by SohRon »
"He slipped back down the alley with some roly-poly little bat-faced girl..."

Assembling my '74 CB550: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=86697.0
Assembly of the Right-hand Switch (a rebuilder's guide):  http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=80532.0
Installing stock 4X4 exhaust: CB500-CB550 K: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=82323.0
CB550 Assembly Manual: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php/topic,151576.0.html

Offline BobbyR

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #65 on: October 17, 2009, 07:22:56 PM »
On a bike I was riding down a local two lane road that winds around some lakes. I was just going 40 and the nearest car had to be 500 ft in front of me. There is a sweeping turn with high cattails at the end. I come around and the cars are stopped dead. I was riding a KZ440 and I could only hit the brakes and hope since traffic was coming the other way.
The KZ had a habit of locking the rear and getting sideways. I saw the front of my tire about to hit the car and she kicked out and I went sideways. They tell you never to let off when she skids since it will send you over the high side, I let off and the bike shot away from the car and toward the oncoming lane.

I really don;t exactly know how I got there but I wound up on the double yellow line next to the stopped car. I was sitting on the tank. I pulled off the road and sat for a while. My balls were killing me. I guess it was another time the Devil decided he did not want me yet.  
« Last Edit: October 18, 2009, 09:33:11 AM by BobbyR »
Dedicated to Sgt. Howard Bruckner 1950 - 1969. KIA LONG KHANH.

But we were boys, and boys will be boys, and so they will. To us, everything was dangerous, but what of that? Had we not been made to live forever?

Offline mystic_1

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #66 on: October 17, 2009, 10:01:19 PM »
I guess it was another time the Devil decided he did not want me yet.   


Not you, just your balls   :o

mystic_1
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Offline w1sa

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #67 on: October 18, 2009, 03:38:36 AM »
..............The only thing I could think of (wearing nothing but jeans and a denim jacket) was that if I hit the pavement I was going to be in a world of hurt; ............

Reminds me of a ride back in '72. Had been doing shift work and worked a 12 hr shift finishing at 1am. I met up with a couple of friends at 8am for an all day country ride. Me, a low time rider on my 250 Honda and the other guys riding Bonnevilles.

Picture perfect day, but hot. I'm kitted out with open face helmet/goggles and denim armour,no gloves.   We covered some miles that day and come late afternoon we're trying to get back to the big smoke before dark. The other two guys are riding like they're on the salt flats and I'm struggling to keep them in sight on the straights.
Passing between farm paddocks and doing about 65mph, I notice a guy in the paddock with a gun and a dog. He's gesturing forward with the gun coming to his shoulder and the dog runs. Well, I see a curve coming and ease off the throttle as the guy disappears in my peripheral vision.  The next thing, I get hit in the face with two bugs. That stunned me. Almost immediately I feel a shooting pain in my left arm.  Off the throttle, on the brake to stop before entering the curve, I ride off the road onto the shoulder, too fast. Wheels loose steering /traction on gravel shoulder and bike slews sideways down other side of shoulder.

I'm lying with my right leg half under the bike and the pain in my elbow is increasing. So I pull myself out and getting up I look back down the road and the guy (with his gun)and his dog are half running along the fence line toward me... Panic set in ......and I try and lift that bike to get out of there and save myself. No strength to lift even that light weight. As he gets closer, Im breaking out in a sweat and falling about in the gravel like an idiot, when I hear the other bikes coming back around the curve.

The farmer gets to the fence opposite me with his dog (barking). I scream at him that he shot me........He looks at me like he doesn't know whether to laugh......so I lift my aching arm and point at the elbow.....no blood.  He asks me very genuinely....."are you OK mate"......I peeled off the denim jacket and buried in my elbow was a suicidal bee. On the goggles were the remains of two more.

The standing joke for some time was...... how I'd been shot on some country back road by a farmer with a bee bee gun....... :-[

Offline SohRon

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #68 on: October 18, 2009, 09:52:41 AM »
Quote
buried in my elbow was a suicidal bee

 :D :D :D Great story! And I know what you mean! There's nothing worse than getting a bee (or two wasps in my case) down the front of your jacket at 75MPH! Just can't stop fast enough! And it does feel like you've been shot. At least the bee could only sting once, unlike the wasps that kept stinging until I managed to bring the bike to a stop. I could just imagine what the passing motorists thought as they watched this wild-eyed motorcyclist careen to the shoulder, leap from his bike and start ripping his clothes off...

I've never used this before, but here it seems appropriate:
ROFLMAO!  :) ;) :D ;D
« Last Edit: October 18, 2009, 10:02:00 AM by SohRon »
"He slipped back down the alley with some roly-poly little bat-faced girl..."

Assembling my '74 CB550: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=86697.0
Assembly of the Right-hand Switch (a rebuilder's guide):  http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=80532.0
Installing stock 4X4 exhaust: CB500-CB550 K: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=82323.0
CB550 Assembly Manual: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php/topic,151576.0.html

Offline Retro Rocket

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Re: Highway Obstacle Stories. Share in the horror...
« Reply #69 on: October 18, 2009, 03:55:00 PM »
I have mentioned this on this site somewhere before, i was riding with a mate in Sydney and we were going out to the Georges River, {Sydney guys will know the road}, and i was about 400 yards in front of my mate when we hit the series of tight corners that make this small ride fun,anyway, half way round one corner i have a hornet go into my full face helmet and sting me on the ear, man does that hurt, without thinking i ripped off my helmet and tossed it to the side of the road and kept going as there was little room to pull over, {its a small mountain}, and i had cars behind me. I went about a half mile further before pulling over to assess the damage to my ear, after a couple of minutes i notice my friend still hasn't come by so i jump on my bike helmet less to go find my helmet and as i rounded the corner where i was stung, my mate was parked on the shoulder next to my helmet looking over the side of the hill as he thought i had gone over the edge, he was amazed to see me coming the other way and quite shocked. After explaining what had happened we had a bit of a laugh and went on our way. Hornets and ears just don't get along..... ;D ;D

Mick
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