Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

March 24, 2011

The Extended Story

Since many of you asked for details, here's the full accident story (with photos in earlier post)...



After getting all the kids home from music lessons at 5:30 pm, I made a quick dinner for them, gave them babysitting instructions, and then headed back into Madison (alone) at 6:30 pm to meet Joe to go to a talk sponsored by our diocese. 

I had not been watching the weather or listening to the news, so I had no idea that the temperature had dropped since we'd come home from music lessons and that the roads had iced up. I was driving the speed limit, unaware that I was about to encounter a very icy road.

I turned on to Storytown Road, and I was going along fine, when all of a sudden, on a perfectly straight stretch of road, I started sliding sideways. I corrected (or thought I did), and for a split second, thought I was going to be alright. Then I had to correct again and again. I feel like I corrected four or more times before I realized that I was headed for the ditch at a very good clip. What happened next is a big jumble in more ways than one, but I know I hit the side of the ditch (which was actually a berm leading up to the field) more than once -- first head on, then again with the rear of the van when I spun, then the van rolled onto its side, and that's when it finally came to a stop. I originally thought I'd flipped the van, but in retrospect, I think it was just hard impacts of the front and rear fenders and then the roll. It's all kind of a blur, but I'll never forget those impacts.

Thankfully, no one else was in the van, and no one else was on the road at the time. But that meant that it was just me, hanging way up there from my seat belt -- now that the driver's side was in the air. I think I was stunned that I was okay when the van came to a stop, but I now I needed to figure out how to get out of the vehicle. While still hanging in my seat belt, I surveyed the situation below me (the passenger side of the van), and although the passenger side window was shattered, I didn't see any big shards of glass that were going to cut me if I jumped down to "ground level" inside the van. So I swung my legs around that big hump that Ford Econolines have between the driver and passenger seat, released the seatbelt, and dropped safely to my feet onto the passenger window. Ta-da! I was out of my seat belt and standing in the rolled van. 

Because I couldn't see out to the road very well, I couldn't easily tell how much of my van was still in the road, and I was concerned about other vehicles coming by and encountering the same ice. I had this extreme impulse to get out of the van and away from it, out of concern that I might be hit while loose in there. All the passenger side doors were against the ground -- unhelpful. The driver side door was above my head—I'm only 5'2", and the van is about 6' wide, I think. So that window was way up there. And the rear doors, from what I could tell, were pushed up against the berm on the far side of the ditch and did not look like a likely escape route. 

Just as I was reaching above my head to the open window above me (I have no recollection of opening that window!), I heard a vehicle coming by. It seemed hard to hear road noises, but I was pretty sure someone had stopped. I started waving my hand through the opening of the window above my head, and I heard a man yelling, "Is anyone in there?" He seemed very surprised when he came around and looked through the front windshield and saw me standing inside the tipped van. He asked if I was okay, and I told him I was, but that I couldn't get out. I think he was not convinced that I was okay (or maybe he was just making sure, before he helped get me out), because I remember he asked again if I was okay, and I just repeated that I was fine and wanted to get out.  I admit that I didn't even think about how hard it might be for him on the outside when I told him I was going to jump up and could he "please catch me." I reached up over my head, jumped, and pulled myself up to about waist level (serious adrenaline-charged strength!). I was then able to get my leg over the opening, and the good samaritan hauled me down from there. I was never so happy to be out of the van.

Another man had pulled up by then, asked if we had called 911 and—when he realized I was struggling to do so (my hands were shaking)—offered to make the call. Meanwhile, Matthew, the man who helped me out of the van, offered to let me sit in his car to get out of the very raw, sleety weather. I think I declined the offer at first (you know, I always teach the kids not to get in a car with a stranger). But I was having trouble even walking to the other side of the road, due to the icy road and my shaky legs. So by the time he asked again, I took him up on his kind offer. Meanwhile, he was busy scaling the van and hanging down, bent at the waist, through the open window to get my keys and purse. Totally unnecessary, but so appreciated. I called Joe who was almost at the Bishop O'Conner Center for the talk, and Matthew offered to stay with me until Joe arrived, bless his heart. I like to think of myself as a strong person, but I think I would have sat in the ditch and cried until Joe came if I'd been there all alone. I was really shaken up.

I listened as Matthew called his wife to tell her he'd be late for dinner because he was "helping a woman who was in a very bad car accident." It all seems surreal now. 

I was so anxious for Joe to arrive. When Joe arrived, after giving me a big kiss and making sure I was alright, he took photos and checked out the van and the many yards of "evidence" of the accident. Although I did get back out at one point with the intention of surveying the damage, I never really went all the way over to that side of the road to check out the skid marks and the gashes in the ditch and on the hill. I guess I didn't want to re-live the accident at that time. But Joe checked it all out, and he thinks he has it all pieced together, based on the gashes he found on the ground and in the ditch and hill. Here's what Joe says:

It looks like you dipped into the ditch three times:

The first time, you were still south of the big berm.  The right-front
tire cut into the dirt, swerved left, but never came back into the road.
(At that point, the back of the van had swerved right, but was already
coming back some).

The second time, you hit the berm hard.  This impact was very hard -
knocked off the bottom, front bumper and literally forced the front of
the van toward the road.

The third time, the berm was almost as tall as the van itself.  At that
point, pretty much the whole van was in the ditch with the front wheels
turned left.  That final impact stopped the front of the vehicle cold -
the back wheels came off the ground and inertia carried them rightward
and upward, pivoting and flipping the van onto its passenger side.

You should bundle up and go check out the tire marks.  It's written
there in the dirt just as plain as day.  You can clearly see where the
tires bit into the dirt and changed direction as you were trying to get
the van under control.  Had the shoulder been flatter, you would have
come out of it fine.  It was the berm that did you in.

The police arrived probably a half-hour after the accident. They apologized for the delay when they arrived and said that they were responding first to the multiple injury accidents all over the county, due to the icy conditions. One of the officers slid down the road as he arrived at the scene. (He didn't go in the ditch, so I guess his vehicle handles better than the big van.  :)

When the wrecker and pull-truck arrived, so did one of Joe's clients—the owner of the towing service. Just before I got to meet him, he wiped out on the icy road and fell on his back-side. Poor guy! At least I wasn't the only one slipping last night. The tow company guys were so nice and helped us get the car seats out of the van and placed in the back of Joe's SUV. 

When we left, I asked Matthew for his name. He told me he knows a good chiropractor if I need one -- turns out he's that chiropractor. A very good guy who helped me in a very frightening situation. I wish I had the name of the other man who called 911 and stayed with me until he was convinced I was okay. I am very grateful to those two men, to the officers who responded on the scene and closed the entire stretch of road for our safety, and to the many people who stopped to make sure I was okay after I'd been pulled out of the van. I spent part of today writing thank you notes to the good people who helped me so much last night.

We don't know yet if the van will be totaled, but we expect so. It was leaking fluid after the crash. The passenger-side window was blown out completely, and the passenger-side mirror is gone. the front windshield is shattered, but not blown out. It took a big hit, and so did I! We're hoping it can be salvaged though, because a new vehicle is definitely not in the budget.

Today, I am thanking God that the kids were not with me, there was no one else involved in the accident, and that I somehow came out of the whole thing unscathed. I am stiff and sore, but otherwise in remarkably good shape. Pretty amazing.  I'm also very pleased it was a "no-fault" accident, so no ticket. :)

Neither Joe nor I had ever been in a serious accident until 18 months ago when Joe had his accident -- and now this. Here's hoping this is the abrupt end of accidents in our lifetimes.

Slip, Sliding Away

Here's what happened to me yesterday on a ice-covered road.

I am thanking God that the kids were at home, Joe was in Madison, and no one else was involved.

And I am thanking God that I walked away from the accident, after climbing out of the top of the van (driver-side window) with the help of a good samaritan.

My guardian angel was working overtime yesterday. I'm still a little shaken. And sore.

I'm busy writing thank-you notes to the people who helped me... I am so grateful today.

Let me tell how weird it is to be on the top-side of a tipped van, hanging from one's seatbelt.

Look at that dirt streak on the road where the van skidded on its side.
I am so, so grateful there was no one on that passenger side.

If you look very carefully, you can see the black fender in the foreground of this photo -- in the ditch.
I hit the ditch in front of that spot, so that was a long series of jolts as the van spun and rolled
and ended up way up there. Glad I missed those telephone poles!

March 19, 2011

Blizzard of 2011

We seem to be in the blizzard-every-year cycle in Wisconsin lately. This year was no exception to the rule.

Enjoy the snowy photos. They don't describe Cheeseheads as coming from the "frozen tundra" for nothing.

Yours Truly,  just beginning the bundling process
before attempting to walk the 1/4 mile to the mailbox in blizzard conditions.

Stanley, the Packer snowman, buried alive.

Drifts reaching the underside of our second story deck.
Note the patio furniture legs sticking out of the drift.

Drifts in front of our sliding door.

Check out the drifts.
That picnic table has a bench on top of it, with another picnic table on top of that.
And the drift is still significantly taller than three picnic tables.

January 15, 2011

Wisconsin Winter Wonderland

I love living where we live.

Not only do we have beautiful snows, amazing scenery, and an abundance of wildlife. But we have the PACKERS!

We're ready for the big Packer-Falcon playoff game tonight. We'll have curried shrimp dinner before the big game, and then we'll settle in with our full tummies for the big hurrah.

You don't think a quick prayer for the Pack would be sacrilegious now, do you?
Kathleen and Andrew enjoy the last minutes of daylight as the sun approaches the horizon.
Kathleen and Andrew in the back yard.
Marguerite practices her Packer touchdown.
She even says "touchdown!" when her hands go up. (Okay, she says "tu-duh.")

December 4, 2010

Say Goodbye to Autumn

With Thanksgiving behind us, we took the pumpkins off the porch. This year, the pumpkins were placed in the chicken coop to keep our birds happy.

It's nice to have manly little men to help with these seasonal chores—especially considering we had over 40 home-grown pumpkins on our front porch.

Andrew and William move the pumpkins to the chicken coop.

February 28, 2009

Playing in the Wisconsin Snow

When you live in Wisconsin, you shovel, you salt, you shovel, you salt, you shovel, you salt... and then you get out and play.

(Or at least you get your husband and kids out to play while you feign an abundance of important indoor duties and cozy-up next to the roaring fire playing Outdoor Photographer Shooting Through Glass.)


March 16, 2008

The Never-Ending Winter


With snow to fill the record books and then some (nearly ninety inches this winter!), Joe and his plow got a good workout.












Joe's plow got stuck a few times this winter. Yes, that's Joe back there, digging out.














Your challenge: Find Joe amidst the snow. Looks like a white-out? Look carefully now... There you go... Right in the middle of the photo... Yes, that's the plow blade to the left, and the body of the tractor (with Joe atop) toward the right--just a shadow in the middle of one of our blizzards.









Before dark fell and before the storm was over, our deck was already piling up with mounds of snow...












And here's the backyard view from our bedroom window the next morning. Look at how the wind pushed the snow overnight! Beautiful!

March 13, 2008

I Spy Deer

We have been visited by so many white-tailed deer this winter, sometimes ten or more at a time. In this photo (taken of our backyard), there are at least six deer. Click on the photo to blow it up, be sure to look closely at the treeline, and see if you can spy all of them.

December 12, 2007

Walkin' in a Winter Wonderland

We headed over to our local Christmas tree farm (just up the road from us) late this afternoon. Trudging through extremely deep snow, we managed to find the "perfect" tree.

Although the photos look peaceful and idyllic, don't be fooled. Miss 22-month-old was none too happy on her extended sled ride through the fluffy white stuff that kept ending up in her face and in her boots. Her wails pierced the silent solitude of the snow-laden farm.

Even so, we found a great big tree for the family room, plus a sweet little "Charlie Brown tree" for the dining room. We'll decorate the trees on William's birthday this Saturday, as has become our annual tradition.

Another year, another snowy trek for the perfect tree...

P.S. The child in red is Therese who looks a bit like a boy in the hand-me-down snowsuit...













December 6, 2007

Frazzles Dusted with Snow

Well, I've been just a wee bit frazzled lately, trying to juggle all the demands of life with five kids, homeschooling, and preparing for Christmas. Oh, in case I forgot to mention: There is also the fact that we're in the midst of community theatre productions -- a mere seven plays over two weekends, all coming right on the heels of three months of nightly rehearsals. All this chauffeur wants for Christmas is a great big nap!

When I come up for air, I'll catch up on the blog posting. For now, here are some lovely winter photos of our backyard and some additional shots of two very happy boys.