Hi everyone,
I thought it would be good to finally post in here after a long time lurking now that my typing and writing ability has improved.
I'm the guy from this article on stuff --> http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/8210...risly-accident
I have gone over the incident in my head hundreds of times and looked at it from every possible angle (including Katman perspective) and can honestly say I was doing absolutely nothing wrong. I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. The only thing I can take away from this is to not go down the back roads of Wairarapa anymore and just stick to the cafes. I don't want to ever repeat my stay in hospital.
To summarise the accident; I was with a group of 4 other riders and was heading out to Masterton via backroads, when a large sheep darted out in front of me from the long grass at the side of the road. I never saw it and never braked. I took the sheep's head clean off and as a consequence went over the handlebars and slid down the road for 100m on my front and knocked out for 3mins. My 2009 R1 (loved that bike) carried on into a culvert before flipping end over end into a paddock. I have no memory of the accident other than turning left at Wainuioru and next waking up in hospital strapped to a neckboard. 4 days in hospital and I came out with bruised intestines, dislocated left thumb, chipped bone in right ankle and concussion. My gear saved my life (+ incredible luck and guardian angel); out of the group I think I was the only one wearing full leathers and a separate back / chest protector (Icon Field Armour). My leather jacket rode up in the slide, but the Armour took the hit and saved me from further injury. The previous day I had been to Motorad and bought an Arai RX7 GP helmet for $1000 - turned out to be the best investment I've ever made. It was the first helmet that actually fitted me in all my years of riding.
I've attached pics including the crash damage pics and gear pics (plus one pic in all her glory). It is my view that good gear gives you a fighting chance at sticking around; hopefully this post might convince others too. I'd also like to say that after reading the trauma that Katiepie went through a couple of years back, her event completely changed how I approached riding and my view of gear too.
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