"Primate" Joins Crash Club

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James Burleigh

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 16, 2006
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Location
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I received an e-mail yesterday from my buddy Kevin V ("Primate") from this forum who also lives and commutes in the Bay Area (Kevin V.). We occasionally pass each other (okay, he passes me) on our way into San Francisco in the morning from Walnut Creek and Concord.

The subject line of the e-mail I received from Primate contained the ominous words "I Went Down." I immediately responded back, and in an e-mail exchange I learned the circumstances of the crash, which Primate has given me permission to post here on his behalf.

First of all, Primate says he's "A-OK," with x-rays revealing nothing broken. But he's sore as hell and back at work after three days off. He lost consciousness briefly at the scene, but refused the ambulance ride in favor of a friend's picking him up. In retrospect he feels he should have taken the ride, since he started hurting after the adrenalin and shock wore off.

As for the accident, here's how Primate described it in his e-mail [edited]:



I was being a good boy and wasn’t even splitting at the time. I was in lane #1 going about 55-60 when lane #2 started slowing. When it came to a screeching halt, this guy jerks out right in front of me! I braked hard but slammed into the back of his car with bike and body, then blanked out prior to realizing I was sliding down the highway.


 
Shoulder and neck really hurt. Guy admitted pulling in front of me to the CHP and myself and was extremely apologetic. Riding gear, helmet and backpack ruined. Laptop survived. Just called Berkeley Yamaha. FJR's totalled.
I told Primate this was a very serious, scary accident that could happen to any one of us, and that he is lucky to have not been injured more severely. I also asked him if he had any lessons learned to share with us from this terrible experience. He shared with me the following thoughts:



I was too kicked back. I was extremely mellow that morning and was not being aggressive at all. To that point, I was also not being Extra Suspect. I had 10 car lengths in front of me. We all know that’s an invitation for lane switchers. Having said that, I don’t know if it would have helped. I can read the body language of a car, as we all do, and we all get cut-off on a weekly basis, but we just slide over and get by. In this case, no turn signal, which we hardly expect anyway. But this came out of left field. It was fast and right in front of my tire. I braked for maybe two feet before slamming him. He lane ****** on me
.
Kevin, I'm sorry for your accident, your pain, your anger, and the loss of your bike. Thank you for sharing this experience with us to help us all be safer riders. Get better soon, and please let me (us) know if we can do anything to help.

Hans

 
Sad to hear. This could have easily been much, much worse. Send our best wishes to Keven. This stuff always happens so fast. Sometimes, there just is no defense.

 
"I was too kicked back. I was extremely mellow that morning and was not being aggressive at all. To that point, I was also not being Extra Suspect. I had 10 car lengths in front of me. We all know that's an invitation for lane switchers. Having said that, I don't know if it would have helped. I can read the body language of a car, as we all do, and we all get cut-off on a weekly basis, but we just slide over and get by. In this case, no turn signal, which we hardly expect anyway. But this came out of left field. It was fast and right in front of my tire. I braked for maybe two feet before slamming him. He lane ****** on me."

1. Thank You Hans for posting this; a lesson to be learned for sure.

2. I hate it when I ride passively. Last time I did so I PASSED a CHP at 90 while he was doing 70... :angry:

3. Signs, clues, indicators. My deer strike, in retrospect, was also due to riding too comfortably - familiar road, nice morning, yaaawnn, OH ****, impact, lucky to walk away.

Learn to Live my friends and fellow riders...

 
Sad day. Heal quick, Kevin.

+2 on the danger of comfortable riding. My crash was at a relatively slow speed, taking my time. It takes the edge off rider skills & attention.

 
Sad to hear. This could have easily been much, much worse. Send our best wishes to Keven. This stuff always happens so fast. Sometimes, there just is no defense.
Like the off-duty Vestavia Hills cop last week that hit a deer on the freeway, and was then run over by 2 cars following (R.I.P). Sorry for your get-off. Go buy a lotto ticket.
 
Glad to hear he's ok and will ride again! Being complacent on a bike is a very bad thing indeed :(

 
Bad news. Soft tissue injuries are "major suckage". At a certain age...ahem...joints, ligaments and tendons hate being manipulated by sudden impact.

Heal quickly and heal well, Kevin.

 
Hope he heals quick, physically and financially.

Thanks for posting the accident account Hans, no way out of that one. :angry:

 
Crashing sux. Hope your buddy gets healed quickly and completely.

As already mentioned, complacency is something we're all guilty of from time to time, yet it is one thing that needs to be checked always. Inevitably it happens on the familiar road or daily commute where nothing has ever gone wrong, or trying to get home from a days long ride and your planning next weeks schedule in your head. Easy to do, dangerous to do.

Been here and done that... in '94 Sat afternoon Houston freeway traffic exact same thing happened to me. I guess I was a bit luckier in that mine was a glancing blow off the side of the car as he came out, sending me into the grassy media where luckily there were no guardrails with posts or speed limit signs to hit before coming to a stop. Cracked some ribs and had the requisite soft tissue damage, other than that very lucky.

Upon reflection I could of taken steps, that I now take, to avoid the accident including slowing my lane instead of zipping past the slower lane. High beams may of made me more visible. Mostly slowing and moving to the right of the lane would of bought me more reaction time.

Anyway, hope the rider feels better soon and gets a new FJR for replacement soon.

 
From one Primate to another.... Heal quickly Kevin!!!

I hope the cager had good insurance, Primate will need a new bike soon... and associated farkles!

It's great he's able to tell the story, welcome to the crash club!

 
As Kevin is a forum member, I assume he was on an FJR? What model?

Healing and better fortune prayers sent.

 
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