wisyooper1
Member
Did they cause you any harm to your person or property?? Then stay out of their business. Thats my opinion. We are all adults here folks.
I agree!!
Did they cause you any harm to your person or property?? Then stay out of their business. Thats my opinion. We are all adults here folks.
I don't know a single Yooper that would carry a gun while sledding unless it was to a hunting spot! I guess when people are raised in the city they have a different outlook on life! And no the wolves aren't going to track you down and eat ya either.
I just Snow Checked one of these, I'm covered!
Seeing as hand guns are illegal in Chicago, you must be a law abiding citizen.
CCW - Glock 27 40s&w - never leave home with out it.
Wow. Things must be tough up in the UP. I've lived in the Chicago area for all of my 48 years, and can't think of ONE time I needed a gun.
Must not be many yoopers in the Chassell area. I know plenty of locals that were born and raised here that carry all day everyday be it in a car or on a sled...
Well my whole family and alot of my friends have CPL licenses but none of them feel the need to carry when they sled. Yes in the cars but that's because sometimes they travel! We all bar hop so carrying is out of the question and we have too much fun to consider it!
So they travel in a car but not on a sled??? Hahaha. I don't drink and if I did I would never drink and ride. Don't see any reason not to carry. Pistol is so small and light I can't even tell its there, its like underwear to me I never leave home without it.
Thanks Skyler and cuzzinolaf it was my pleasure to help out! Not only for the wellbeing of a fellow sledder, but in hoping others will notice and do the same to help others out when in time of need. On a side note it makes for a tense couple of seconds but the thanks he gave on the way to his cabin was priceless! Happy trails.And the person who gave that guy a lift, is a JD member, yooperrev. Tim, you are class act!
Fast forward:
Making his way back to the parking lot where the trailers parked, he is passed by four sleds that are blazing a fast past in the opposite direction...and he notices they all had special badging on the sleds but they passed by him so fast that he could not tell what markings they had...one appeared to be a sheriff sled...be he could not tell they were "making haste"
Arriving at his destination, he hears 4 cop cars with sirens blaring and lights flashing. People are gathering at the trail head and he naturally stops to see what the commotion is all about. He learns that 4 fatalities/ occurred "back down the trail a ways" with head on crashes of "some sort" and that the rescue sleds are part way back waiting for ambulances to arrive. First responders are waiting by the road with flares and flashlights blinking.
Now that very sinking feeling hits him that the worst thing possible has happened and HE might have had a chance to prevent it. Meanwhile the headlights of two sleds come bobbing out of the woods with guys shouting over the roar of the motors....and people jump into action. "These two are alive....."
Still think that he should have stood by and "tossed a few down" with those sledders? Do you really think that any weapons and who was carrying and who wasn't is the issue here? Somebody has to "make the call" to relatives and it isn't going to be something they will enjoy. Funeral arrangements must begin, and family members must be notified, kids must be excused for a week or two of absences to take care of grieving….that sort of thing.
After reading some of the responses on here, I can definitely see the "line" where some folks would be the bystanders "staying out of it" and where some would be the Good Samaritan, jumping in at any cost to try and prevent something terrible from happening. It saddens me to think that all John Dee'ers would not be of the second order here and not the first order. But society is like this these days....and we are not all raised with the same ethical standards.
Time of need is not necessarily someone lying there in a pool of blood on the side of the trail...and this is an example where some obvious issues came to light, innocently and genuine concern for the lives of those guys was paramount.
Just the idea that he brought this up on this snowmobiling website makes me proud to be in association with him. For the record, I would have called at first opportunity, and I would NOT have been concerned about being the TRAIL POLICE and if it was ME that put the spotlight on THOSE guys who might have had too much to drink, then I would feel happy as possible that I did something to at least try and end a group of drinkers who were on an extended ride and binge....not because I am worried about them in particular, but that the family out there riding home with perhaps some younger kids in the group might have been saved from the above scenario. IF these guys survived is a side note to saving the lives of those who did NOT have the benefit of seeing that these guys “probably” were 4 sheets to the wind…or at least a couple of them suggested that they had “downed” a few.
And I thank you for even trying to find out what to do. It means you have morals and care about your fellow sledders. It means that your concern for them, and far more importantly, others on the trail was where it should have been and that you COULD have just shrugged your shoulders and said…”oh well…boys will be boys….”
Now carry on about carrying weapons and the need to blast a fellow sledder or wild animal who might take you on as an enemy of the woods. It should take precedence and is by far the more important topic in this thread.</SPAN>
I'm just wondering what everyone with CPL's do when they enter a bar for food on their sleds! I'm sure they're not tucked away in a windshield bag! HMMMMM looks like metal detectors in bars sound like a good idea now!
oh, good idea, why don't you get some "screeners" to pat you down while you're at it.
you have way more to fear from those without CPL's than those with them.
it makes me feel more comfortable knowing those that carry are around, safety in numbers!
Wow. Things must be tough up in the UP. I've lived in the Chicago area for all of my 48 years, and can't think of ONE time I needed a gun.