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  • Ice Storm Follies

    Shalom's response in my Weird Weather thread reminded me of an accident I was in 1994.

    Picture it: The Eastern Shore of Maryland, January 1994. My father was getting ready to retire from the Federal Government after 37 years. I was planning to drive up to my parents so I could attend the official retirement dinner shingdig that the Defense Systems Management College was throwing him.

    The weather was looking a bit dodgy. There was nothing going on where I was (Salisbury) but the Bay Bridge has a bad reputation of icing up quick. So I call the Bridge to ask about the road conditions before I start out.

    They assure me the weather is clear, no precipitation, just very cold.

    So I head out on the road. So far so good. Everything is fine.

    I get to Cambridge, and it begins to drizzle lightly. Still not too cold, and rain not ice, sleet or snow.

    I cross the Choptank River bridge and BAM!

    Full blown ice storm. Coming down fast and hard. Road is very slippery.

    I slow down, but am still fish tailing all over the place. I realize the road conditions are too dangerous and ease over to the left lane to do a U turn and go home.

    A pick up truck comes up behind me in the right hand lane, and loses control. He cuts in front of me, and swerves into the ditch on the left (median). I manage to slow down and keep control of my vehicle.

    Dipwad speeds up as he gains control and tries to re-enter the highway . . . right in front of me. He loses control again and starts sliding sideways up the road. I tap and try to slow even more but this time I hydroplane and lose control. The car actually speeds up a bit due to this, and I T Bone the guy, glance off, and end up in the ditch on the right hand side of the road.

    My left arm goes dead. I can't move it at all. I'm shaking I'm so scared.

    This fellow who lives in a house off the highway sees the series of accidents happening all up and down the highway and calls 911, then comes to check on me. I still can't move my arm.

    Ambulance takes an hour to get there due to the road conditions. They put me in a C collar and a backboard. My arm is starting to come back to life by now.

    It takes us another hour to get to the hospital in Easton, which is normally a 15 minute drive away (I wish they'd take me to the hospital in Cambridge which is actually closer).

    Half way there, I have to pee. Like really, really bad (well, it's been 3 hours since I left home). They put me on a bed pan.

    No go.

    Finally they get me to the hospital and check me out. My arm is fine by this point. No broken bones; just a pinched nerve and muscle strain. My roommates come pick me up at the hospital as the cops tell me it's going to be a day or two before my car can be towed (it was not drivable).

    This is because they are just too busy. There were 75 car accidents in the same 15 minute period as mine.

    Needless to say, I missed Dad's retirement dinner
    They say that God only gives us what we can handle. Apparently, God thinks I'm a bad ass.

  • #2
    Yikes! That must have been scary as hell. So glad you weren't really hurt.

    We don't get a lot of freakish weather around here, except every so often we get some very heavy fog.

    Fog can be pretty scary. Seems to cause as many massive car pileups as everything else combined..

    ^-.-^
    Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

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    • #3
      I can deal with snow but ice sends shivers down my spine. Too many jackasses that the don't realize that 4 wheel drive does you no good when you have no traction.

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      • #4
        For one of her second jobs my mom had to drive this tiny little car. I forget what it was but it was barely big enough for 2 people (I think some kind of Ford, but this was early 70's so I could be wrong). Middle of winter, driving to various stores to drop off the pictures people took with their cameras (she worked for the lab). She comes over the top of a hill in a pretty strong storm and the wind was coming from in front of her. It picked the car up and flipped it. Mom says the only thing that kept her going was the car landed right back on it's wheels and she had to keep steering. If it had landed any other way, she wasn't sure she would have been able to keep driving.

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        • #5
          I nearly flipped my car back in '99, during an ice storm. Because most city streets were dangerous, I got out of work early. Slow going, because the city *refuses* to throw down any salt or cinders. No big deal, really. I'm used to it, and can handle snow and ice. Anyway, getting home was difficult due to the sheer number of wrecks and detours. Again, not a problem--stay in the low gears, and don't use the brakes unless you have to. Or at least I *thought* it wasn't a problem...

          As I'm coming down my street, my block hadn't been touched for some reason. Since my street is cut into the side of a hill, there's a steep drop-off on the right, and a stone wall on the left. So I'm in 1st gear, cruising down at a whopping 5mph when it happened. All of a sudden, the Tercel decides it wants to kiss the wall

          I didn't hit the wall--I managed to steer out of that, but what happened next couldn't be helped. I spun all the way around, and slid (sideways) off the road...into a pile of snow. Had that pile not been there, I would have slid over the hill, and flipped the car onto its roof

          Several years later, I nearly got into a much-worse accident because of ice. "Much worse" because I would have hit someone else...

          On the way home one night in 2006, I hit a patch of ice coming down a hill. My Mazda nails the curb on the right, then starts sliding down the hill (sideways) towards a car stopped at the stop sign. I'm laying on the horn, screaming out the window "Get the fuck out of the way." Because of the way my front tires were wedged against the curb, there was no way in hell I could steer out of that. I'd have to wait until I slid onto a side street. But, does anyone want to guess what that driver did? He turns around and looks...then gets out of the way at the last possible second...before I would have hit him.
          Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines. --Enzo Ferrari

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          • #6
            Quoth mikoyan29 View Post
            I can deal with snow but ice sends shivers down my spine. Too many jackasses that the don't realize that 4 wheel drive does you no good when you have no traction.
            we had one snowfall here and the only road i went on with ice on it was the road i live off of.

            still people seemed to think nothing of driving normal speeds... until they lost traction and went off into the deep ditch.

            me, being from the north and rather use to shitty snow/ice conditions... was doing 2 mph all the way down that road. surprise surprise, no problems.

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            • #7
              Quoth PepperElf View Post
              we had one snowfall here and the only road i went on with ice on it was the road i live off of.

              still people seemed to think nothing of driving normal speeds... until they lost traction and went off into the deep ditch.

              me, being from the north and rather use to shitty snow/ice conditions... was doing 2 mph all the way down that road. surprise surprise, no problems.
              Every time I am on the freeway after a major snow storm, the sides are littered with SUVs.

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