Hate to see this, not good. Glad the boy did not have serious injuries, hopefully a lesson learned and safer riding results.Happened in the UP today or Yesterday be careful out there guys were lucky no serious injuries
At my age I basically pull over and either stop or slow to a crawl and let others pass that are coming at me and then proceed on. If coming into a turn unless it is all ice and unpredictable I am very careful to be on my side of the turn just out of caution to myself so I don't get hammered. Obviously still guys out there that feel that they own the whole trail and probably always will be. Hopefully they show this video at all Snowmobile Safety Courses.This is all over FB. Guy on wrong side of trail (Doo) was on a rental (big surprise). AC group had just stopped before this and were going to switch lead sled, but one was running poorly so they didn't. His old man would have taken this hit had they done that. AC rider said he went off on the dude, cussing and yelling. Then I'd assume the adrenaline wore off and he went down as seen in the video. Doo rider took full responsibility when DNR showed up (pretty hard not too when you see where he was on the trail). AC rider did say that the guy came up to him later and apologized face-to-face. Other pics show the entire front end of the sled, pretty much all the way up to the bars is toast. Like not even there any more.
Extremely fortunate that there were not serious injuries or deaths in this case. I think it's everyone's worst fear... Come around a blind corner and there is sled pointed at you head on. I take corners at a crawl on the regular, but probably still would have taken the hit. Zero time to react.
I get what you are saying but confronting other riders on the trail gets hot quick. One can influence his pack but I don’t think it’s a good idea to try and tell others how and where to ride unless it’s your land. Been there done that and it escalates quickly. Just sharing my experience on the trail.This was VERY LUCKY, you all agree.
All of these problems ( reckless driving / ignorance / trespassing / not staying on the trail, etc. ) are due to the Entire Sledding Community turning a blind-eye and for lack of better words ... tolerating it, with the attitude that " It's not my job to train them".
Reckless driving gets worse every season, Trespassing also.
This is a Wonderful Sport that is constantly threatened to be ended by STUPID. We're closer to the end as we know it than most think.
These problems need to be at the forefront of all entities involved in the sport. Until that happens, we reap what we choose to ignore.
Folks, this is way beyond throwing out brilliant ideas on forums. It's great that, the responsible folks here chime in and recognize the issues and the severity of their consequences. Without action, the consequences will be realized continually.
I have the option where I live to ride where and when I want, I choose to ride mainly during the week and stick pretty much to Vilas and the surrounding counties. In all my travels this year I have seen some things that make my brain steam a little like guys that just can't seem to stay on the trail and need to ride up and down the side of hills but that has always happened. I have not seen too many examples of people being terribly destructive to the point that a trail has to be closed. I know there are examples this year and that is not a good thing especially for the guys that maintain and keep these trails open for the greater good. Maybe I am just not riding in those places where the temptation is there to trespass or tear things up (most of my rides involve areas where there is not a huge concentration of riders or bars) but that is my choice. I have been following your posts and appreciate the fact that you are calling this out but I don't think it is as dire as you make it out to be. But......that is my opinion and we are all entitled to have one. Hope everyone has some great riding this weekend, you won't find the trail system in much better shape this late in the season. Stay safe (I don't think I need to tell this group to keep it on the trails)This was VERY LUCKY, you all agree.
All of these problems ( reckless driving / ignorance / trespassing / not staying on the trail, etc. ) are due to the Entire Sledding Community turning a blind-eye and for lack of better words ... tolerating it, with the attitude that " It's not my job to train them".
Reckless driving gets worse every season, Trespassing also.
This is a Wonderful Sport that is constantly threatened to be ended by STUPID. We're closer to the end as we know it than most think.
These problems need to be at the forefront of all entities involved in the sport. Until that happens, we reap what we choose to ignore.
Folks, this is way beyond throwing out brilliant ideas on forums. It's great that, the responsible folks here chime in and recognize the issues and the severity of their consequences. Without action, the consequences will be realized continually.
You did the right thing by staying with your son and yes, its a small segment of the riders that are A$$holes.I had an oddball situation a few weeks ago. I took my 12 year old for his first trail ride. We were in SW lower MI, just north of Kalamazoo. On the west side was more forest and the east side was more fields... As we were getting back in the fields we come to a road crossing There is a field on the other side of the street the trail runs next to a tree line on the right. The trail swoops to the left to make a right-hand turn to the right into the trees. The total length of the field is 1/10 of a mile. At the stop sign, there was no one behind us. About halfway down that field, I look back in my mirror to check on my son and I see headlights behind him. I start to pull to the right and stop and my son yells at me on the radio, Don't stop, go. I did what he said, assuming he thought he was going to not be able to stop. Then right off the back of my left shoulder, I have two guys flying around me at this point riding 3 wide on the trail (It was a field so there was room to the left, but still 3 wide and not on the trail.) The guy closest to me just felt like he was super close. My son was at least 50' behind me and said, those guys scared me, I thought the one was going to hit you. I said he was real close considering we are in a field. He was basically being inconsiderate. My son then says, I thought your only suppose to pass on the left? I said that is what he did, just really close. He says no dad, they both passed me at the same time and the guy that was really close to you passed me on the right then cut me off and passed you on the left and I was to the right side. When you start to stop I thought he was going to hit you. I had to make sure I understood him correctly. So we completely stopped at this point and talked to my son, face to face, to make sure I had the story straight. While I would have loved to have had a chat with these guys, the only way that would happen is if I left my son by himself and I was not doing that. One last thing from the stop to where these guys passed us we were going about 35. So not fast but we were not crawling a 10 either.
So the common theme here in all these posts is respect, courtesy, and common sense. All of which seem to be in short supply with a small segment of the population lately but have huge consequences.
Lost or lost as we know it. Watch any video of someone getting pulled over on YouTube on a sled. No matter how good the interaction is even if the person posting says how nice the cops were. There is always a hand full of them in the comments that are the, "They will never catch me, crowd, that chimes in."I try to be optimistic, but on this subject I'm at a loss. You can't teach common sense. I fear this idiocy won't stop until our trail system is gone.
True story. We're our own worst enemy. Last month on a ride a lady in our small group got pulled over and ticketed for rolling a stop sign (I was riding behind her and she was definitely guilty). Her response? She couldn't be upset because the ticketing officer (MI DNR) was hot.Lost or lost as we know it. Watch any video of someone getting pulled over on YouTube on a sled. No matter how good the interaction is even if the person posting says how nice the cops were. There is always a hand full of them in the comments that are the, "They will never catch me, crowd, that chimes in."