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Confession time

JCSMOKE

New member
Today on the way to work I was placed in a most unfortunate position. I had no choice but to hold on tight as a cat that sprinted out in front of me met its reward via critter splitter and tire contact at 60 MPH. I would have hit the cat( I now lovingly call tread mark ) if I had zigged or zagged. RIP kitty
 
Sorry for the cat... but the biggest mistake people make is swerving to avoid things like this... which can put you into the ditch... into another car or a tree.

Brake and slow down if you can... but you're best off hitting it dead on......

Poor kitty......:-(
 
I must say I am pleasantly surprised by the sensitivity. I clicked on the thread expecting macho jokes about the cat's demise.

I once came over an overpass on a motorcycle to see two dogs standing side by side in each of the wheel ruts where car tires go. No time to stop plus I was going downhill so I slowed as much as I could and shot between them with a foot to spare on each side. Scared the bejeezus out of all three of us.

David
 
Mike,
It's never easy when you're placed in that situation. :shocked: I always tell my clients that no matter how much it stinks, just brake hard and take what happens. Never swerve to avoid an animal and put yourself or others at risk! :thumbup:
And as much as I don't like cats; this just ain't funny and I truly sympathize with you and the folks who owned the cat. :pray:
 
just me

I must say I am pleasantly surprised by the sensitivity. I clicked on the thread expecting macho jokes about the cat's demise.

I once came over an overpass on a motorcycle to see two dogs standing side by side in each of the wheel ruts where car tires go. No time to stop plus I was going downhill so I slowed as much as I could and shot between them with a foot to spare on each side. Scared the bejeezus out of all three of us.

David
people are so worried about hurting someone elses feelings over the dumbest sh:cus: . relax.
J C SMOKE -1
MANGY FERAL CAT -0
 
other critters

A couple months ago I hit a black bird. It came up the hood, windshield and then over my right shoulder, just missing my head. If it had happened any slower it would have scared the crap out of me. No harm to the spyder or me but fatal for the bird.
 
Thanks for posting this

I'm new to Spyderdom, (or is it Spyderness?) and was wondering about this issue. On a motorcycle you can swerve fairly easy to avoid certain things. I wasn't sure if it was better to hold on, brake and hope for the best, or try to swerve to miss the obstacle. My sense was to hold on and brake - seems to be the right thing. I hit a deer once in a car. Jumped out right in front of me at dusk - classic. I braked hard, but took him out nonetheless. All I could hear was my ex-husbands voice in my head "don't swerve ever" as I held my course. Really hard emotionally, as I love deer (not quite so much now that I'm ryding my Spyder in the mountains all the time), but I was quite greatful for Dave's voice.
 
I'm an animal lover myself, but when driving critters become second priority to my own safety and that of the people I'm on the vehicle with.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
 
Thanks guys for the support, I'm not losing much sleep over this but I thought bringing it up may help folks. I generally like furry animals of all sizes, but I'm not married to them over me
 
I used to teach teen driver training. My statement on this subject. Which is more important, you, your familys life or the animal. I love animals by the way.
there was a local case where a 16 year old female was killed in a single car crash. Straight road, no evidence (impact scene) of speeding, early evening, alone in car, no cell or text in use, vehicle path thru ditch and grass, very sharp turn from road. Final impact was a tree.
Unknown cause, but very high concentration of deer in that area.
Oldmanzues
 
Bottom line is that cat could have been anywhere on the planet he wanted to be. He chose to be under your Spyder and he reaped the consequences of his decision.

You will also reap the consequenses of your decision. You MUST keep your line! Swerving to miss an animal does not guarantee that you will not hit them anyway. But it greatly increases the chance that you will become a victim.

A saying we had in the fire service was, 'An emergency on your part does not necessarily constitute an emergency on our part'.

Sounds a bit callous but the idea was to stay calm while others around you are in panic mode. It's the only way you can keep from becoming part of the problem.

The time to decide you will not swerve to miss an animal is before you ever get on your Spyder because in the heat of the moment is a very bad time to make a decision.

Not to say that a controlled manuver within safe parameters is not warranted. Just no panic moves.
 
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