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In fairness to Grant re: the helmet issue, I've seen him headed up Mt. Diablo with one strapped to the bars. It's safe to assume it's not still on the bars on the way down..
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. Fortunately my fantastic recovery
skills ( or my guardian angel) kept me from ploughing into the curb at
37 mph.
Patrick, your comments about angels reminds me of two rides I have done down the Appalachian Gap road. It starts off very steeply then settles into a 10-14 % grade, with four or five hairpin switchbacks. I went up there, about 40 up hill miles from my home, the first time I got my Rambouillet on the road. I was having an exhilarating ride down, using the whole road, when a voice said, "Michael, this is nuts, you have no idea what's around the next corner. I took the next turn slower and close to the inside line. Sure enough the rare car came up and around the next turn.
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Since you asked... I'd say "wisdom".
Yours,
Thomas Lynn Skean
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South Colorado, 2001, riding my Rambouillet along the Trans Am Western Express, ultra light, my back tire lost its air just slower than a blow out on a chip topped road with some winding downhill eases and my options grew fewer as the PSI fell and the next curve came. I finally took one turns to be able to brake in a straight line long enough on the flaccid tire and tube to get down in speed while still on the bike. Nice idea, not what happened. I yawed widely on the slack rear tire to the point that I was almost sideways. Speed and some semblance of grip presented itself and I flew over the bars, cartwheeling slowly forward, landing on the ugly road surface with my head, my left shoulder blade and elbow.
I got up and dragged my bike out of the road so I must have been OK. I changed my rear tube and one of my colleagues' rear tubes my shoulder slipping out of alignment each pump stroke. It was separated, all the way
One of the others noted my visible injury and I said I was riding to the next town (our destination anyway) and got up on my bike which faired pretty well given the violence of my dissipation of velocity on this surface.
Speed is the engine of injury, no doubt. But it sure is a fun test of equipment you know. Just have to keep some contingent thought available to handle the what-ifs.