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Safe riding - rider down outside my house
#11
I knew it was inevitable when I was riding home last night. There's a large memorial set up on the street corner, and several people were on the sidewalk holding candles. There were a few bikes parked at the curb at the spot. I wanted to stop, but I couldn't bring myself to do it. My wife left town for the weekend to tend to her parents, and that spot is on our evening walk, so in a few days, I know we'll pass it, and I'll stop and pay my respects. I'm also thinking about my wife's reaction. To my knowledge, she knew there was a crash on our street, but not that it was a motorcycle. She's very accepting of my passion to ride, but she has no interest herself, and having a rider lose his life on our block will no doubt have an effect. She'll ask me how I thought the crash happened, and if I'd ever be in that position.

Also, I'm in the middle of a garage project that had me make multiple trips to the hardware store last night, so I passed the memorial a few more times.

Each time I went through the curve last night, I put myself in a different lane position and waited until I had a clear view of where the firetruck would have been. I used to do accident investigation and reconstruction, so this is rolling over in my mind constantly. From the news footage, the truck hadn't really started to enter the road yet. There were two clear lanes of travel in the bike's direction, and at any speed, even excessive, he would have had a clear view and enough room and time to pass the truck without incident. I can only think that there had to be a contributing factor. Perhaps he was following a car that panic braked when it saw the fire truck, or a car from the side street was trying to get around the truck. Or someone may have been standing in the road to help direct the truck. Something caused that rider to swerve right and hit the truck.

Regarding the firetruck, to your point jimgl3, why was the truck backing into the street? If it were headed back to the fire station a half a block away, it was pointed forward on a street that would have taken it through a winding residential area and eventually back to the station. Was it more convenient to just back up onto the larger street and drive straight to the station? If it had it's lights flashing, did it cause other drivers to react erratically?

Working in the garage until the wee hours, taking advantage of my wife's absence. Late last night, I heard another car, a V8, drop a gear and mash the throttle to speed through the turn. I wondered what his reaction was going to be when he came out on the other side, and flew past a group of people holding a vigil for someone who just lost his life there. Truly sad.
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#12
It is very difficult to fix stupid .
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#13
Last year my community streets received speed bumps. They appear to work ... for cars. Pick-ups, SUVs and in particular - motorcycles have no issue. They race over/around them. Even the ultra low sport cars sprint from speed bump to speed bump only to end up crawling over them. In doing so they wake the entire neighbourhood between speed bumps with their engine/exhaust.

Fix stupid? No. Fix selfish self-absorbed. Appears not.
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#14
Another one...I was riding home yesterday afternoon through Gresham (Oregon) and took a side street that is normally free of traffic, but this time it was stacked up, both ways. When I got to the main street (Burnside), I could tell whatever was holding up traffic was to my right, and I was thankful that I was turning left; you know, no one likes being in traffic.

This morning, a friend texts and asks if I saw the report about the guy who got killed on a motorcycle. I hadn't, but then I looked it up and realized the accident was the reason for the traffic jam from yesterday.

[url=https://www.koin.com/news/crashes/suv-motorcycle-collide-burnside-road-oregon-trail-center-gresham-june-12-2019/2072564930]report

Then my daughter calls from California as she is on her way for a fun European trip, and she's all upset. Turns out the young man killed was a pretty good friend from hers since grade school, then middle school, all the way through high school as well.

I could tell what was on her mind. She asked me to be extra special careful while riding. I asked her if she thought I should give up riding. She said no...that she still wants to ride with me (2-up). Just that it was upsetting.

Safe riding, folks.
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#15
It's always very sad when you know someone who was in a motorcycle accident. And, it shakes those around us that it may happen to us as well. Years ago, after listening to me brag at the office about how quickly I could get to and from work, and wasn't trapped in traffic like my poor, foolish car-bound mates, a young coworker said "I want to do that too." His commute was much further than mine. I gave him my speech about "are you sure?", and "get your wife/girlfriend's approval", etc. I mentored him, helped him pick out his first bike, helped him get set up for the MSF course, select gear, etc. All too soon, well before I would have let him, he showed up to work on that bike. Later that evening, transitioning freeways, and having a commanding view of the 55 north from the 405 south, I could see red lights coming up. He had left a few minutes before me, and I already knew what I was about to see. There was my coworker, shaken but not stirred, talking with authorities while his bruised SV650 was leaning on the center divider. My heart sunk until I learned that he was not badly injured. His fiancee made him sell the bike immediately.

One of the reasons I had avoided visiting the memorial on my street was that I might look at the portrait that was propped up on the curb and recognize the rider. There are plenty of group rides, hangouts and meet-ups in the area, and you get familiar with people.

A few nights ago, my wife and I took our normal neighborhood walk, and went by the memorial. Looking at the picture, I didn't recognize the poor fellow, but there was, a week later, still a very large outpouring of love on the curb. Candles, flowers, cards, notes, and little things, like packages of food he must have liked. Very sad.

My wife could see me analyzing the remnants of the crash clean-up, and looking at a fresh scrape in the road. She said "I know that guy must have been going fast, and I know that's not how you ride." That was reassuring, at least.
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#16
GI60, that story ended much better than what I was expecting to read. Glad your friend survived OK.
You did everything you could to prepare him, and you shouldn't have felt any guilt if things hadn't turned out so well, but regardless, you can't turn your heart and mind off when you know somebody very well.
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#17
I was just paying it forward. A few years before that, another coworker took me under his wing when I got jealous that he was getting to work faster on his bike.
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