The D.A.
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 77
- Location
- Lawrence, Kansas
Yesterday I had a singularly bad experience. A coworker and I decided to walk up to the University of Kansas campus over the lunch hour. After a pleasant time at the student union and the natural history museum we were walking back to the courthouse when I stepped on a manhole cover. The cover was perfectly flush, but when I stepped on it with my left foot the cover pivoted like some kind of trapdoor and down into the storm drain I went!
Fortunately the storm drain was only waist-deep. With the assistance of my friend and several motorists who saw what happened and stopped to help me I managed to extricate myself from the hole, only to find that the right leg of my khakis below the knee was soaked with blood. I pulled the cuff up expecting to see a bone sticking through the skin, but fortunately it was only badly gashed. One of the people who stopped to help drove me to the hospital, where stock was taken of my injuries. Nothing was broken, but my left leg was badly scraped, my right needed stitches, my right ankle was sprained, and my ribs were badly bruised. I was lucky to have escaped with such light injuries, and I'm glad that it was me that fell into the hole rather than some student overburdened with a load of books (I reported the problem to the city as soon as I got out of the hospital).
Not only am I writing this as a warning to my fellow Loungers about the dangers of manholes, but I'm also writing it as a testament to the durability of leather jackets, especially those made of goatskin. I was wearing my Protocol/U.S. Wings goatskin Indy jacket, and I have no doubt that it saved my right side from being gashed or badly scraped. When I fell into the hole the rusty, pivoted-up manhole cover raked my right side from waist to armpit. At the hospital I examined my jacket with trepidation, but I found that, aside from some scuff and dirt/rust marks that easily wiped-off, the jacket wasn't damaged at all! I had heard that goatskin is tough, and now I have the proof.
So, in summary, DO NOT step on manhole covers/grates in the sidewalk, and if you want a tough, protective garment, you can't go wrong with goatskin.
Fortunately the storm drain was only waist-deep. With the assistance of my friend and several motorists who saw what happened and stopped to help me I managed to extricate myself from the hole, only to find that the right leg of my khakis below the knee was soaked with blood. I pulled the cuff up expecting to see a bone sticking through the skin, but fortunately it was only badly gashed. One of the people who stopped to help drove me to the hospital, where stock was taken of my injuries. Nothing was broken, but my left leg was badly scraped, my right needed stitches, my right ankle was sprained, and my ribs were badly bruised. I was lucky to have escaped with such light injuries, and I'm glad that it was me that fell into the hole rather than some student overburdened with a load of books (I reported the problem to the city as soon as I got out of the hospital).
Not only am I writing this as a warning to my fellow Loungers about the dangers of manholes, but I'm also writing it as a testament to the durability of leather jackets, especially those made of goatskin. I was wearing my Protocol/U.S. Wings goatskin Indy jacket, and I have no doubt that it saved my right side from being gashed or badly scraped. When I fell into the hole the rusty, pivoted-up manhole cover raked my right side from waist to armpit. At the hospital I examined my jacket with trepidation, but I found that, aside from some scuff and dirt/rust marks that easily wiped-off, the jacket wasn't damaged at all! I had heard that goatskin is tough, and now I have the proof.
So, in summary, DO NOT step on manhole covers/grates in the sidewalk, and if you want a tough, protective garment, you can't go wrong with goatskin.