Broken arm. Caveman solution to cast. 2005
Custom made #CavemanCast. Patent pending.
My 2005 off season reading was Lee McCormack & Brian Lopes’ book on mountain biking skills. As a fairly competent mountain biker, I was amazed at how much there is still to learn about the art of making an off road bicycle go fast.
My favorite quote from the book was: “if you are not pedaling, you should be pumping*”
I was practicing my pumping through a particularly technical section near Stellenbosch. Specialized had their Team Camp here in January. I was fortunate enough to be able to participate in the camp and the main reason for the camp: Tire testing.
On the very first group ride with the Team I pumped and pedaled all I was worth. Pushing the limits through a long technical section, going faster and faster. I pumped through a rock garden and the next thing I knew I was on the ground, tangled with my bike. I never saw the fall coming, and instinctively I must have put my hand out to protect my face. (In hindsight, it wasn’t worth it)
I bled like a pig, but didn’t hurt too badly and carried on with the ride. However, about an hour later, holding the bar on the downhills became quite painful.
To make a long story short, I broke the scafoid in my hand and tore some cartilage in the wrist. Fortunately no metal hardware was required, but doc slapped a cast on my arm and said “see you In six weeks, don’t move” So I launched into cross examination: Can I still run? “NO” Can I swim? “Your skin will rot.” Ride the rollers? “NO” When will the bone be attached enough to start run, swim, riding the rollers? “Young man, I don’t like the questions you are asking” “the scafoid is not a break to be toyed with, if you mess it up, think screws and bone transplants.”
So I went forth and was a good boy. Only water-skied once and bush dove once.
What the doctor did NOT order http://viagrasstore.net/.
After 3 weeks I was back at the doc, but when he saw the cast he yelled: “YOU TOOK IT OFF!!!” But the X rays were good and he said, “running on a treadmill and riding the home trainer is ok.” So I ran on the beach and rugby fields, and rode my MTB on the road.
A modification was the needed to camouflage the cast, as I was getting tired of the ”what happened to your arm” questions. Feeling rather creative, I decided to mix my own colours for the job. I wanted brown, green and khaki camo. Roger brown and Roger green, but the khaki proved a real enigma and I ended up with pink, some blue-ish colour and some shade of purple. Very effective though. I could hide in my garden for hours without anyone noticing me, if it wasn’t for the smell…
The training, combined with the scorching temperatures and the water skiing caused that cast to PONG.
So one stinking hot afternoon, (pun intended) I gathered all my gardening tools that has some kind of edge to it and Henk and I started hacking at the offending arm viagra kaufen österreich.
In the end we just took the angle grinder and cut the thing open. Hair raising stuff.
Note protective eye wear.
First soap and water. Repeat, repeat, repeat. Then some sun shine. Doc’s skin rot theory seems plausible. Then I tore the offending cotton wool out and replaced it with a Gore-Tex T-shirt. Next I drilled about 80 ventilation holes in the cast, and zip tied the thing back on.
Now I can train and sweat as much as I like, when the business gets wet and nasty, I just change its nappy and zip tie it back on. Patent pending.
The story should have a happy ending March 1.
*Pumping means using the terrain and then weigh or un weigh the bike accordingly to create speed. (go read the book, they explain it better)
[…] I was practicing my pumping through a particularly technical section near Stellenbosch. Specialized had their Team Camp here in January and I was fortunate enough to be able to participate in the camp and the main reason for the camp: Tire testing…Read More […]
First time reading the story. I like it! I am an orthopedic surgeon myself. Good lessons for me. And YES you should consider a patent!
Thanks for the timely update for me. Broke my collarbone on the weekend and seeing this helped with perspective.
Conrad I said it before and I’ll say it again …. you are a unique tulip!