NancysToy
Motorbike Professor
Today was an interesting day. Started out rainy and cold, like so many of our days this summer. No matter, I had to go to the doctor anyway. That didn't turn out so good. A couple of weeks ago, I did a slow speed tip-over on rough pavement at Mid-Ohio during Vintage Motorcycle Days. My Simplex bobber is so low to the ground that when the motor plate dug in and stopped me suddenly, I couldn't get my foot past the crash bars and onto the ground in time. I dislocated my thumb when we (Scotty & Simplex) fell on top of it. I couldn't work the throttle, and certainly wasn't going to push it back to the other side of the track and the campground, so I pulled it into joint and continued. I thought I was recovering reasonably well. The pain was less and the swelling was down, but after the puffiness was gone it looked funny to me, acted kinda weird, and some things still hurt terribly. I couldn't turn a key or lift a mug, for instance. They believe I ruptured a ligament, leaving one side of the joint unattached. An MRI next week will tell the tale for certain. If it is ruptured, it will need surgery, slowing me down for a while. The worst part, other than this being a bad time to have surgery (I have a pole barn to build for the new house), is that they had to put a splint on it to protect it, lest it tear some more. I cannot grip a throttle or bend my wrist. Looks like my riding is done for a while. Boo, hiss! 
The day was not a total loss, however. We broke ground for the new house today...the excavator put up the silt fence, started cutting a driveway, and scraped the topsoil off the house site. If the bank will hurry up and finalize the loan, we should be able to have the precast foundation in place in a couple of weeks. That would let us get the shell up, closed in, and the half-log siding installed before the snow flies. Now if I can just figure out how to hold a nail gun so I can do the barn.

The day was not a total loss, however. We broke ground for the new house today...the excavator put up the silt fence, started cutting a driveway, and scraped the topsoil off the house site. If the bank will hurry up and finalize the loan, we should be able to have the precast foundation in place in a couple of weeks. That would let us get the shell up, closed in, and the half-log siding installed before the snow flies. Now if I can just figure out how to hold a nail gun so I can do the barn.