Man Down
on Old Mine Road
Sunday morning; Worthington State Forest.
He was on his face in the middle of the road when
I first saw him, his body sprawled at a crooked angle beside his bike. Helmet
askew, he was not moving, there was a small pool of blood near his head and I
thought for a second he was dead.
His right eye was open, staring unfocused and blankly
ahead. Then a blink and a spark of life and the eye began to clear, he lifted his
head a bit as his brain seemed to reboot and to make sense of what was
happening.
“Mister, can you hear me?” I shout! ”I’m
getting help. Hang in there. Don’t move.” He seems to hear the sounds, but not
the words.
We were deep in Worthington State
Forest on Old Mine Road last Sunday morning when he wrecked his bike and I
found him unconscious on the road. He was halfway through a 20-mile bike ride
and I was driving to the trail for a hike up to Sunfish Pond.
I ran to my truck to find a phone and put on
the flashers. The road is deserted and, I think, “this just happened, and this
man is badly hurt!”
I fight to breathe and process the
scene. I offer a silent plea – “Father, you brought me to this place right now.
Please help me” – while telling myself. “OK, come on man, you’re a ridgerunner and
you are trained for this. You can do this.”)
He sits up, but does not speak. Remembering
my wilderness first aide training, I keep trying to make contact while looking
for injuries. – “Can you hear me? What is your name?”
Confused, he struggles for words that won’t
come.
Finally. “Dale.”
I call Trenton Dispatch for a policeman and an
ambulance. I keep talking to Dale while playing traffic cop for passing
rubber-neckers and also sharing information with Dispatch.
“Dale, can you tell me what happened? What day
is it?”
“Trying to get my bearings,” he says.
A trauma nurse stops to help and park police
arrive a few minutes before the ambulance.
Medics arrive and bandage his head, secure his
right shoulder and put him on a gurney for the ride to the hospital. The helmet probably saved his life, but the
impact also shaved off part of his left ear.
I found Dale and called Dispatch at 9:06 a.m. He
was on his way to the hospital by 10 o’clock.
I was hiking again by noon, giving thanks for a
happy ending.
-30-
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