wildkat
09-30-2007, 04:01 AM
As most regulars know I've been at this nearly 30 years and have had many hair raising experiences over the years, but the absolute worst was 2 winters ago....
I'd left Edmonton bound for Yellowknife in December 2 winters ago... was a nice balmy night, not too cold, bout -15 or so, no wind, it was 1 am or there abouts when I left Edmonton heading north, one of those quiet, clear winter nights nights we love up here.
Going though Peace River, 5 hours north of Edmonton, something odd happened...it started to warm up...considerablely...it was now +2. By the time I got to Manning, another hour north it was +4... oh oh I'm thinking...
By the time Twin Lakes came it was RAINING...really raining & the temp had fallen to +1...not good... by High Level 8 hours north of Edmonton it had quit raining & turned to snow...temp -1
Fuel & coffee stop...the last one on this trip... got out of the truck & nearly landed on my butt! OMG! Major icy. Skated to the store & asked the girls inside how the roads were heading north..."Little slippery, sanding trucks out", OK not so bad. WRONG!
10 klick out of High Level is the airport, I'm doing 80K (50mph), it's slushy, but not too bad...all of the sudden there's NO sand...ZERO, nadda, zip... Roads are glare ice...not traction, no steering, zip!
Here I am doin 80k totally out of control...I'm in freefall! OMG I'm gonna die today was all I could think. I was totally along for the ride, no hope of stopping, thinkining if I hit a bump, a curve, anything I AM dead!
So what to do? What to do?
Well thankfully the road is arrow straight for about 15k (10 miles), so I snugged my seatbelt really tight & s l o w l y...painfully slowly, eased in my clutch & slipped her into neutral...figgering at least if I hit the ditch I could hopefully keep her on her wheels & plow some snow. Recall I have ZERO steering...GOD I'm scared...
It took at least 6-8 miles to coast to a stop...YES I kept it somehow on the road that day, how? don't ask me, I still don't know!...Much more good luck than good management that's for sure! bad case of "noodle legs" I think it took 1/2 hour for my legs to stop shaking, but it took nearly 2 hours for the sanding truck to get to me.
This is not something I EVER want to repeat. And in nearly 30 years of driving I have never been so scared in all my life!
I'd left Edmonton bound for Yellowknife in December 2 winters ago... was a nice balmy night, not too cold, bout -15 or so, no wind, it was 1 am or there abouts when I left Edmonton heading north, one of those quiet, clear winter nights nights we love up here.
Going though Peace River, 5 hours north of Edmonton, something odd happened...it started to warm up...considerablely...it was now +2. By the time I got to Manning, another hour north it was +4... oh oh I'm thinking...
By the time Twin Lakes came it was RAINING...really raining & the temp had fallen to +1...not good... by High Level 8 hours north of Edmonton it had quit raining & turned to snow...temp -1
Fuel & coffee stop...the last one on this trip... got out of the truck & nearly landed on my butt! OMG! Major icy. Skated to the store & asked the girls inside how the roads were heading north..."Little slippery, sanding trucks out", OK not so bad. WRONG!
10 klick out of High Level is the airport, I'm doing 80K (50mph), it's slushy, but not too bad...all of the sudden there's NO sand...ZERO, nadda, zip... Roads are glare ice...not traction, no steering, zip!
Here I am doin 80k totally out of control...I'm in freefall! OMG I'm gonna die today was all I could think. I was totally along for the ride, no hope of stopping, thinkining if I hit a bump, a curve, anything I AM dead!
So what to do? What to do?
Well thankfully the road is arrow straight for about 15k (10 miles), so I snugged my seatbelt really tight & s l o w l y...painfully slowly, eased in my clutch & slipped her into neutral...figgering at least if I hit the ditch I could hopefully keep her on her wheels & plow some snow. Recall I have ZERO steering...GOD I'm scared...
It took at least 6-8 miles to coast to a stop...YES I kept it somehow on the road that day, how? don't ask me, I still don't know!...Much more good luck than good management that's for sure! bad case of "noodle legs" I think it took 1/2 hour for my legs to stop shaking, but it took nearly 2 hours for the sanding truck to get to me.
This is not something I EVER want to repeat. And in nearly 30 years of driving I have never been so scared in all my life!