06-30-2026, 06:44 AM
(06-29-2026, 09:49 AM)Gone in 60 Wrote: On Friday, my CB1100 brought me some mental solace, along with a bleeding skull and visual distraction for work.
Friday started out as a an easy run with an anticipated early end, which would have ended with a long bike ride to the beach. But, an emergency call right after I finished my sandwich around the corner from our drop-off point at a medical research center kicked the day into a 350 mile, eight-hour stint in the saddle. Along the way, I saw something my mind couldn't shake loose.
A few locals will know where I'm talking about, but The 134 freeway narrows a bit and forms a chicane where it swings under The 5, and it's a magnet for accidents. I imagine cars going too fast in the middle of the night are caught unaware by the quick right turn and lose control. More than once, I've been stopped by CHP in that spot as they hold up all traffic to let a tow truck drag a wrecked car away. But Friday the sight was horrific. A low-boy flatbed and a crane on the shoulder, reaching for something that must have crashed hard enough to have gone into the bushes away from the roadway into a shallow ravine. One lane on the left side was open, and as I crawled past, concentrating on the cars to either side of me, I caught a glimpse of a mashed up wad of something dark blue being brought up by the crane. For a solid 1/8 mile past the spot pushed to the right shoulder was a strewn mess of suspension parts, wheels, shattered plastic and other bits.
Moved on past the mess and made my delivery. The emergency call turned me around to head back in the other direction, and I started rolling. When I was about 15 miles East of the accident site, I came up behind that low-boy flatbed truck from earlier, being escorted by two CHP cars, one in front and one behind. On the truck was a twisted mass that, to my best guess, was once a pick-up truck. I'm a truck guy and I couldn't tell what kind it used to be. I could tell that resuers had peeled sheet metal away from what was the cab to extract the occupants. I used to be an insurance accident scene investigaor many, many moons ago, and am a bit jaded when it comes to car crashes, but this image shook me.
Got home at the end of the day, and all I wanted was some garage therapy to clear my mid of that image. What better way than to polish the headers on my CB. I hadn't since the DGR, and the gold tinge was starting to give way to those tiny little black dots. Grabbed a rag and my Blue Magic, leaned over, and thunk. Yup, banged my head into a fin on the cylinder head. I have the worst up-close depth perception. I bang my head a lot. But 20 minutes later, my pipes looked sweeter than ever, and I felt pretty good!
Having been in the fire service now for over a year I have seen some not so nice car accidents, just had one last night in 95 deg Wisconsin weather. Can't imagine how the emergency responders feel in your area Gone, those men and women must be 100% sweat after a call like that.
Seeing car accidents is no joke, it all happens so fast. The heaviest traffic I have been in is around the phoenix Arizona area with what feels like 10 lane traffic with everyone cruising at 90 mph and was very thankful every time I made it back to our hotel safely.
One thing I have noticed on car accident scenes as a firefighter is the amount of oil, coolant and other fluids that come from a car that's been wrecked, as well as the billion little plastic and glass pieces that scatter around the road. We try to do our best job on scene to clean up the roadway for vehicles to pass through once we are done, using floor dry for spills and trying our best to get all of the debris picked up and off the road. The point I am getting at is we never are able to truly get it perfect. After my first accident I was at all I could think of is if I came through that area afterwards on my motorcycle, potentially hitting and oil slick or puncturing a tire from car debris. Last night's accident the oil pan shattered on one of the cars leaving a large oil slick on a curved area of the road. I mentioned to my captain we should try to clean up the oil since if a motorcycle came through, I have no doubt they would potentially crash their bike. We were able to get most of the oil cleaned up and bagged for disposal, but still the roadway was not perfectly clean. Something to keep in the back of your mind riding a motorcycle, areas from a previous accident can have debris & fluids around for long time. Another reason to keep your head on a swivel and pay good attention to the road and its conditions.
Glad you made it home safe Gone, as well as anyone else here whenever they ride. It's a blessing to be able to ride a beautiful bike like the CB and even more of a blessing to return home to loved ones afterwards.
'84 Honda Magna VF700 (Gone, but not forgotten)
'06 Yamaha VStar Classic 1100
'14 Honda CB1100 Std
'06 Yamaha VStar Classic 1100
'14 Honda CB1100 Std
