At 5:41pm PST last Friday that is one of the questions I received from a surprise phone call from the GEOS International Emergency Response Coordination Center. It took me by surprise. Sam had left me his Spotwalla track to follow with a comment about going to Oregon for the weekend but I had no idea I was his Emergency Response Contact. What followed was a two hour series of constant phone calls as Local Search and Rescue, CHP and Siskiyou County Sheriffs were called into action to find a lost rider who had issued a 911 emergency signal from his SPOT device.
He was found on the side of the road near Medicine Lake, CA approximately 2 hours later after hitting a deer (if anyone here cares to know). He was injured, had been unconscious and required medical attention. A group of common friends who were "Local" were called into action and Sam was met at the hospital with people who were responsible and cared about what was happening to him. They also mobilized a separate team to retrieve his motorcycle and belongings - should we ALL be so lucky when the unavoidable happens to us. This story fortunately has a happy ending, but it is not always so.
Having been in such situations myself and knowing many who have not fared so well (there is whole "garden" of rocks near Gerlach, NV that memorializes those who have not been so fortunate)I know only too well that he is awful lucky to learn a difficult lesson.
Last night, I was feeling good that all ended so well. He was safely at home and moving on with life, starting to recover from his injuries and scoping out the damage to his motorcycle. That is when I found out during casual conversation for the first time that this was not a solo ride but rather a rather large RTE activity. He was with other riders, he was supposed to be sharing a room with a person in Klamath Falls, less that 75 miles from where he crashed and nobody thought to ask the question:
************************ Where is Puppychow? ******************************
The people I spend my riding time with are a different breed - Long Distance Riders have more experience with this sort of Emergency, they recognize when someone is not where they are supposed to be - they WILL go out looking for missing riders, notify authorities and not just pretend nothing happened with a missing rider. We KNOW that a missing rider is an emergency situation that needs immediate attention - we are the ones who plant those memorials and recognize them each year at our own formal ceremony.
I don't know who was with Puppychow, I do not know the specifics of what information he had given people. I do know his route was known to the riders (more information than I or any of the emergency responders had). I do know that there were others on that road with him, and they are list members here, I do know that they failed to perform the basic requirements of keeping a group together (when the rider behind you is not insight upon making a turn, you STOP until they can see you make that turn - if that happens all the way up the line eventually the leader stops and regroups the riders). I do know that he would still be out on that road if not for me.
Puppychow bears much of the blame here and is going to get a full earfull from me when I get the opportunity as he made a series of mistakes putting himself in that situation, but there are others here who have some splaining to do also. I just cannot believe nobody thought to ask the question I was asked - "Where is Sam". Nobody thought to retrace that road when there was a missing rider at dusk (a remote road that is one of the most deer infested in the whole country - and believe me, I know), nobody wondered why he did not show up at his reserved hotel, nobody thought to check on Sam and find out he was hospitalized, you all just kept on going.
Glad you all had such a great weekend - It could have ended VERY differently.
Brian R.
He was found on the side of the road near Medicine Lake, CA approximately 2 hours later after hitting a deer (if anyone here cares to know). He was injured, had been unconscious and required medical attention. A group of common friends who were "Local" were called into action and Sam was met at the hospital with people who were responsible and cared about what was happening to him. They also mobilized a separate team to retrieve his motorcycle and belongings - should we ALL be so lucky when the unavoidable happens to us. This story fortunately has a happy ending, but it is not always so.
Having been in such situations myself and knowing many who have not fared so well (there is whole "garden" of rocks near Gerlach, NV that memorializes those who have not been so fortunate)I know only too well that he is awful lucky to learn a difficult lesson.
Last night, I was feeling good that all ended so well. He was safely at home and moving on with life, starting to recover from his injuries and scoping out the damage to his motorcycle. That is when I found out during casual conversation for the first time that this was not a solo ride but rather a rather large RTE activity. He was with other riders, he was supposed to be sharing a room with a person in Klamath Falls, less that 75 miles from where he crashed and nobody thought to ask the question:
************************ Where is Puppychow? ******************************
The people I spend my riding time with are a different breed - Long Distance Riders have more experience with this sort of Emergency, they recognize when someone is not where they are supposed to be - they WILL go out looking for missing riders, notify authorities and not just pretend nothing happened with a missing rider. We KNOW that a missing rider is an emergency situation that needs immediate attention - we are the ones who plant those memorials and recognize them each year at our own formal ceremony.
I don't know who was with Puppychow, I do not know the specifics of what information he had given people. I do know his route was known to the riders (more information than I or any of the emergency responders had). I do know that there were others on that road with him, and they are list members here, I do know that they failed to perform the basic requirements of keeping a group together (when the rider behind you is not insight upon making a turn, you STOP until they can see you make that turn - if that happens all the way up the line eventually the leader stops and regroups the riders). I do know that he would still be out on that road if not for me.
Puppychow bears much of the blame here and is going to get a full earfull from me when I get the opportunity as he made a series of mistakes putting himself in that situation, but there are others here who have some splaining to do also. I just cannot believe nobody thought to ask the question I was asked - "Where is Sam". Nobody thought to retrace that road when there was a missing rider at dusk (a remote road that is one of the most deer infested in the whole country - and believe me, I know), nobody wondered why he did not show up at his reserved hotel, nobody thought to check on Sam and find out he was hospitalized, you all just kept on going.
Glad you all had such a great weekend - It could have ended VERY differently.
Brian R.