Hey, that's great, CM!! I'm just glad to have raised a few folks' awareness of this. It is very smart to have a plan in place prior to the situation arising.Originally Posted by CorsairMac
Emily
Hey, that's great, CM!! I'm just glad to have raised a few folks' awareness of this. It is very smart to have a plan in place prior to the situation arising.Originally Posted by CorsairMac
Emily
Emily
2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
2007 Trek Pilot 5.0 WSD "Gloria" - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
2004 Bike Friday Petite Pocket Crusoe - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
I'm not convinced that acting as prey to a large preditor (which, after all, is what all dogs are) is a good idea."what do we do in case of loose dogs?", the consensus was we would speed up and ride like Hades, calling out to each other to make sure we didn't lose anyone.
What worked for me on my trip was to slow down, make myself big and bark NO! I used a deep chest voice and projected a lot of confidence. Of course, I'm a big woman and had dog spray in my hand when I did it.
The idea is to let them know that you are bigger, badder and meaner than they can ever hope to be. So far, with the dogs I've encountered, this method has worked better than running like a scared rabbit - which I had tried in the past. I'm not pretending I can bluff all dogs - that's why I carry dog spray. I don't intend to lose a confrontation with a dog.
One more thing. If you slow down, or even stop, the chances of a really bad wreck go down dramatically, and your chance of scoring a direct hit with the dog spray goes up.
One last, last thing. DH turned a bear once with this method when were hiking.![]()
MomOnBike (AKA Alpha B-i-t-c-h and proud of it)
Give big space to the festive dog that make sport in the roadway. Avoid entanglement with your wheel spoke.
(Sign in Japan)
1978 Raleigh Gran Prix
2003 EZ Sport AX
Oh gosh, I think you have to be quick with your thinking for each and every time. I think Corsair's discussion with her ride partners is the start. You've all got to agree to start talking to come up with a plan immediately. Hubby was climbing a steep hill when crazy lady purposefully let out her 2 crazy-trained Great Danes and sent them after him. On a hill that steep he was going so slow that he was automatically prey and the dogs were smart enough to get on both sides of the bike so he couldn't use the bike as a shield. If he had been able to go down hill he probably could have gotten away. I know I've out sprinted small dogs on the flats that would have come right under the cranks if I had stopped and gotten off the bike. I know that my best deep-throated growl imitation has stopped a few.
The good thing is lycra is an excellent pressure bandage. Hubby rode back to the car, drove to the Doc-in-a-Box where the triage nurse didn't believe him when he said he'd been bitten by a Great Dane. He rolled back the bandage and, voila, she decided that spurting blood was not a good thing to have in the waiting room.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.
So, did you sue her?Originally Posted by SadieKate
No, her trailer burned down the following week (I promise that it wasn't us!!!Originally Posted by nuthatch
) and it wasn't the first time for the dog attack. Law enforcement took care of it and there certainly wasn't anything for which to sue her, unless you wanted the cinder blocks under her trailer or the weeds in her yard.
Frends know gud humors when dey is hear it. ~ Da Crockydiles of ZZE.
Wow! Talk about just deserts!
I know pelvic break pain all too well.![]()
Just take care of yourself and be careful with the trainer. I pushed myself too hard while healing and I paid for it for months!
You are doing well - best wishes for continued healing!
---
ETA: After reading your blog....
.... I still have some various hardware within me. I was told that surgical grade hardware doesn't set off metal detectors. In fact, I did test it at an airport and never set off the detectors. So you might be ok in that respect!![]()
Also, there are few cases in which keeping the hardware is required - I've had most of my hardware removed because it caused me additional pain (and therefore was covered by insurance). Don't hesitate to get pain checked out even a year from now - I tend to grow bone spurs in injury areas - it's pain that you *don't* have to live with!
Last edited by Cdalekat; 05-18-2005 at 06:04 PM.