
And for those of you wondering, speed was not a factor, only road condition. It took less than a minute after my truck immobilized for Greg to get to me while Steve, who was following me on Highway 2, called 911. Greg was just great; he introduced himself right away and they both kept talking to me till the EMS arrived. There was also a nice young female who stood by and gathered some of my stuff that spilled out of the truck by the broken window. I’m grateful for their help & company. It took 10 minutes for the firemen to get to the site and just a couple minutes for them to assess my condition, secure the truck and release me from the seat belt. I had been “hanging” upside down, hold up to the seat by the seat belt, unable to detach it. Once the fireman cut the belt, I was able to crawl out of the car, with their help pulling me out, and I walked out unscratched. Without the seatbelt, I would have been thrown all over and would have been seriously injured for sure.
Use it; it is not an optional accessory.
4 comments:
You were lucky! Just think if you had hit something else - a car, a bridge, a cliff... yow!
Now, on to more important things, how to get to work, and what to replace your beloved truck?
Yes I know: somebody was obviously working overtime last nite to fix the cards and make sure no cars hit me and to make me miss by less than 10 feet a double post. If I had not rolled over in the ditch, I would have ended up on the train tracks. My beloved truck will not be easy to replace; we were a good match.
Here in Kanada, we get the dogs harnessed to the sled and we mush-mush to work!!!
Best of luck with your car insurance company. I hope that all will turn out for the best.
Mamé must have been working overtime!
Rachel
I'm already heartbroken about loosing the Pathfinder; I'm sure I'm up for dissapointment when the insurance company proposes to settle. Sucks.
Post a Comment