The BladeForums.com 2024 Traditional Knife is ready to order! See this thread for details:
https://www.bladeforums.com/threads/bladeforums-2024-traditional-knife.2003187/
Price is $300 $250 ea (shipped within CONUS). If you live outside the US, I will contact you after your order for extra shipping charges.
Order here: https://www.bladeforums.com/help/2024-traditional/ - Order as many as you like, we have plenty.
Ahhhhh sledding. Sledding at night in high school with some friends at a golf course trying to find the jump everyone used to build over a concrete water valve housing, I went downhill 3rd after hearing my buddy yell he ”just missed it”, well I sure as hell found it and it took me by surprise flipping me upside down in the air allowing me to land on my neck, crunching my body over like a scorpion. When I finally came back to conscious I was pleased that I wasn‘t paralyzed but wasn't too happy that my own knee decided to drive itself into my face breaking my nose and knocking me out.
No knives involved but there was a ton of blood!
I find it ironic that you spent so many years fighting the scourge of drug addiction only to spend the last 20 years here enabling the scourge of knife addiction!!"Just when I thought I was out...they pull me back in."
Okay, here's one...
Back when I was young and dumb and full of...
...well, anyway...we were doing a controlled delivery of a large amount of narcotics which we had seized after we arrested mope #1 with the load.
Flipped him and got him to cooperate, which entailed calling mope #2 to come to his location and pick up the load.
I had two other agents with me from DEA and Customs who I sent upstairs in the residence and I got in one of those little broom closets built in under the stairs to the second level with my shotgun.
So, mope #2 eventually arrives and we go to radio silence and I can hear them conversing in Spanish, which I was pretty fluent in...but what I don't know is whether or not mope #1 is telegraphing anything to mope #2 by looks, pointing, eye gestures or whatever...and the other two agents are upstairs with no visual either...waiting for the deal to go down. What could go wrong?
I hear some footsteps walking back and forth outside my location and eventually the door to the closet is pulled open and mope #2 is standing there with a very wide-eyed look as he is greeted with an 870 pointed at his face. Fortunately, he neither had a gun in his hand nor attempted to grab the shotgun. He gave up without a struggle.
So many things could have gone wrong that I won't even begin to enumerate them...but we got the bad guys and the load. (If any of you have read Jim Cirillo's "Tales of the Stakeout Squad" you'll have read of similar events, warts and all.)
It was definitely a "there but for the grace of God" moment...or Darwin Award finalist.
(We ended up flipping the same load several times that day, including another "interesting" event later on that evening at the Embassy Suites in Miami.)
Yeah, but with knife addiction, you don’t draw innocent, naive people in and… oh wait…I find it ironic that you spent so many years fighting the scourge of drug addiction only to spend the last 20 years here enabling the scourge of knife addiction!!![]()
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I'm merely a tour guide...I find it ironic that you spent so many years fighting the scourge of drug addiction only to spend the last 20 years here enabling the scourge of knife addiction!!![]()
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That reminds me of a story from my youth. Not sleds in my case but bicycles.
We had a large gully out back on the farm that we would jump our bikes over. I think I was 9 or 10ish when my brothers decided to make the jump more interesting using cinderblocks and a sheet of plywood. Wanting to impress my older siblings, I said I'd have a go at it so I hopped on my hand-me-down bike with the sweet banana seat and started picking up speed. Right when my front tire hit the board and I saw the edge of the jump looming over the gully, I immediately had second thoughts and twisted the handlebars violently to the right. This resulted in the handle punching me in the gut and sending me flying over the handlebars and into the bottom of the gully. I smashed my face into a rock, chipping several of my front teeth in the process.
My brothers were howling, of course. In hindsight, I'm sure it looked really funny.
Oof. This reminded me of similar stupidity in my youth.A few years ago, I was camping with a friend in the Tetons. Decided to spend a day walking / climbing a horseshoe ridge by myself. It was fun - very exposed in sections, with great views, but easy climbing / scrambling.
At the end of the day, I came to a saddle that dropped very steeply back into the valley where we were camped. Being incorrigibly lazy, and not wanting to retrace the whole route, I looked at the 60 degree gravel slope and thought “I can get down that - it’ll be just like running down a scree slope.”
Long story short, I misjudged BADLY. The ground was still frozen, but with a half inch of loose gravel on top of it. So instead of my feet sinking into the substrate and giving me some control over my descent, it was like moving on a smooth, hard surface strewn with marbles. Once I’d started down, I couldn’t really get back up, so ended up pressing myself spread-eagled into the ground, literally inching my way across the slope, trying to find any bit of texture on the surface that would give me a little purchase, and constantly telling myself to stay calm because the slightest slip would have been fatal. If I started to slide, there would be no way to control it or stop until I hit the valley floor a few hundred meters below. After an age, I managed to reach a tongue of compacted snow/ice in a shallow gully and down-climbed that by cutting steps with a sharp stone as an improvised ice axe.
I’ve done a number of stupid things on mountains (was once designated “most likely to die young” by a mountaineering buddy), but I’ve never been so close to death over an extended period due to one stupid assumption.
Three points of contact at all times was exactly what my dad told me. Of course, for modern sport climbers, 3 points of contact would be 2 fingernails and a spiritual connection to the mountain.Oof. This reminded me of similar stupidity in my youth.
Visiting a cousin, and there was a cliff not too far from her house. I think I was around 13 or 14 at the time.
As we were hiking around the area, we decided to try climbing this cliff. My brother is 2 years older and my cousin was right between us in age.
All the scree at the base should’ve given us an indication, but we were too young and inexperienced to know better.
As we began climbing, we started to realize that the cliff was VERY crumbly. Our dads had taught us the basics of climbing, testing handholds and footholds, maintaining 3 points of contact etc., which was a good thing, because a lot of the time, handholds or footholds would break off as we were testing them.
Of course, we had zero equipment. We made it up maybe a little over halfway, where we found a shallow cave and stopped and enjoyed the view from 150-200 feet up, then decided we should climb back down, as it got steeper above that point (up to that point we hadn’t hit too many vertical sections), and my cousin didn’t feel comfortable trying to go any higher.
Well, that danged cliff stuck in my stubborn little mind all day long, so the next morning, I woke up early and headed out for it solo, without telling anyone or even leaving a note.
Yup. The darned thing was really crumbly, and as I got higher, I discovered that I couldn’t even stay in one spot for very long, as footholds and handholds would break, so I had to constantly keep moving.
When I finally got to within 15-30 feet from the top, I realized that the top was undercut. A lot of it had broken away, and I would be hanging off this crumbly crap, to scale the last part.
At that time/age, I was also not very comfortable/good at down climbing, not to mention that it was difficult to stay in one spot looking for the next foothold for downclimbing.
As I was trying to figure out what to do, not being able to climb up, down, or stay in one spot for very long, I kept crabbing sideways, and got lucky finding a deep crack, that finally allowed me to get to the top.
It was only then, that I finally had the time to realize how stupid that was. Not only the attempt, but not even leaving a note.
The back side of that bluff was actually hikeable. It just took a few extra miles to go down that way. When I finally got back to my cousins house, everyone had been up for quite a while already, and asked, “Where’ve you been?”. I just said, “Sorry. Went for an early morning hike and lost track of the time”.
Later that day, my cousin whispered to me, “You went back and climbed that cliff, didn’t you? Thought so. Dumbass”.![]()
Your glissade reminds me of another time. Was in the mountains on the Macedonia-Albania border, sliding on my butt down a big snow slope. The run-out was a patch of rock-strewn flatter land. I thought "when I get to the end of the snow, I'll just pop up onto my feet and literally run out of the slide."Climbing stories...love it.
I have had issues with my right shoulder ever since I attempted a standing glissade on the Lizard Head glacier in the Wind River Range back in 1974. I ended up hitting something in the snow and ice that had me go ass over teakettle and only by pure luck hit an obstruction before going over the edge for a few hundred feet. My first comment to my mates who thought I was dead was "Can we take a break". I literally never was able to self arrest with my old Stubai ax. Dislocated the shoulder, had the pin from my belt buckle punch a small hole in my midsection, and was generally beat up, but thankful. Rapelling down off the mountain was a load of fun that afternoon.
As a result of the shoulder issue, some years later while climbing in the Shawangunks in NY, there was a climb that required a hand traverse (legs dangling) to a crack or face off to the left. The rock was cut great for bombproof handholds, but unfortunately for me, my shoulder popped out mid traverse. So, I called to my belayer to be ready in case I fell. I was able to sidle over crablike by tucking my right elbow into my torso and just grabbing enough rock to allow me to move the left hand over a bit. Finished the traverse and then it was an easy stretch to the top.
Couldn't drive my stick shift Datsun 510 home from the cliff, so I had to have my partner drive it and then stay at his place over the weekend until it felt well enough to
Damn I'm sorryToday: started my new job, jumped out of truck, rolled ankle. Multiply ankle circumference by 3.View attachment 2451664
You should post those gains in the lifting thread! Just kidding, get well soon.Today: started my new job, jumped out of truck, rolled ankle. Multiply ankle circumference by 3.View attachment 2451664