PDA

View Full Version : #876 crash write-up


Yikes
11-15-2007, 12:28 PM
This is from RDC and one of the driver's of the #876 that went down the cliff. Kudos to Class 3's #303 Gale Pike.


Truck # 876 Crash Details! Everyone is Ok! Huge Thanks!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hey Guys

I dont know where to start, been gettings TONS of phone calls, texts, and emails asking wasup, so here is the skinny:

About 2 hours after i got out of the truck at our driver change, we got the call!

Of course hearing your guys just drove off of a 1000ft cliff sends everyone into a frenzy, but we had a great group that held it together well and worked as a team to get things done with minimal panic.

Yes, the reports were true, the truck went off of a rocky cliff into a ravine approximately 600-700ft. This was at about 3am early Saturday Morning @ RM 235+/-

We are unsure exactly how it happened but the witnesses in truck # 303 said that they were stuck on the edge of the cliff, we tried to get around them (single track terrain), clipped their bumper, hit a soft spot and cartwheeled down the hill. They estimated the truck rolled end over end a mininum of 15 times and the co-driver of truck # 303 said he vomitted after watching the truck crash thinking he just watched 2 fellow racers die.

People have been asking who was in the truck and their conditions, the driver @ the time of the crash was Brett Garland and the co-driver was Mike Shortt. Both were ok and conscious @ the time, were sharp enough to immediately turn off the fuel pump and batteries and get the hell out. They exited via the hole that used to house a windshield and climbed up the 700+ft hill to truck # 303.

The guys @ truck #303 immediately took control of the situation, assesed the injuries and made the immediate call for a helo to extract Brett due to a severe concussion and complains of side pains, they stayed with him for 3+ hours until sunrise when the helo could land. They were in a fairly gnarly area and the guys did some recon to find a landing spot for the helo and then moved Brett as close as they could. Helos cant fly @ night (during a race) and the accident happened around 3am or so, so they were there for approx 3 hours. As soon as the sun rose, the SCORE helo was there and brought him to San Quintin to prep for transport to the US. Not sure what helo arrived but someone showed up and transported him directly to UCSD Medical Center immediately. The total time of extraction from Crash site to a US hospital was under 4 hours, mighty damn impressive!

Must give a huge thanks to team #303 (not sure of the name) for staying with Brett and Mike all throughout this and taking care of them!

They did a bunch of tests at the hospital, diagnosed it as a moderate concussion and bruised ribs and now he is there for resting, mike is fine and only had a few bruises. We are trying to get pics of the crash, but believe me when i say they are lucky to be alive!

The next step was extracting Mike, since the Helo only took the injured party out. We were @ an access road around RM209 and they were on the course @ RM235 or so. Our support trucks were a big dodge diesel truck, a 2wd tacoma, and my Land Cruiser. Choice was easy, i was going in. Took us over 5 hours to cover 20 miles of trail that made the rubicon look like candyland. We played it very safe and went super slow since we were now down to one capable recovery rig and would be going deep into no mans land solo.

Once we arrived to the crash site, we almost threw up too, i looked at mike, looked at the truck and could not believe he was standing there looking at me.

The guys from truck #303 were already helping us strip whatever we could off of the truck and helped us hoof it up the cliffside. Again, huge kudos to these guys! We loaded Mike and whatever else we could into my truck and headed back towards the others. We didnt arrive to them until dusk, and they had been patiently been waiting there ALL day for us!! We swapped stories and decided it was time for a nice steak dinner! Enjoyed a nice dinner, relaxed for a few minutes and headed home to one of the fastest border crossings ever, a whopping 3 minute wait!

As for the race and why these crashes, happened, i am going to say fatigue!

We have been working on this thing around the clock for the last 3 months, worked on it prepping stuff right up until race day morning, and everyone was just plain wiped out.

I did the start and the first 207 miles and did so on adrenaline only (only 3 hours sleep the night before the race), we had a great time, held our own and ran mid pack for a bit, but the brand new shocks need some major adjusting after we worked them a little and them got warm @ around RM 50 or so. Unfortunately we didnt have a chance to test and this was the result.

When the shocks got cushy, we were restricted to about 25mph or so in the rough stuff and we lost a bunch of time.

We pulled into the BFG pit 1 where they firmed up the compression stroke of the bypasses a few clicks and it made all the difference in the world!

After the shocks were tweaked, We were able make some good time breezing through an uncrowded Mikes Sky Ranch, but the time we lost during the shock softness (around 60 miles restricted to 25mph) got us to our pit quite a bit later then we had hoped it everyone was already getting tired. It is impossible to catch some shut eye when you are waiting to get into a race truck!

When i got out of the truck, i was still all amped up, but after sitting down for 5 mins and drinking some water, i was WIPED and crashed hard, no chance i was driving a chase truck for 200+ miles! Sleep deprivation was immediately apparent!

Want to give another huge thanks to truck # 303, SCORE Medical, Weatherman, and all the other teams that stopped to help.

Does anyone know if #303 was able to unstuck themselves?? Hoping so, they were in a gnarly situation too!

Well, this was definitely an experience and a 1/2, we are VERY glad everyone is ok!

Thanks again to all that sent prayers and well wishes

Blanco
11-15-2007, 12:50 PM
Glad to hear that the medical responce was much faster then what I was hearing from the Weather man that morning on my way home..

I suppose I can understand the confusion that takes place durung times like these.
I'm also very happy to hear it was not as bad as they made it sound on Weather man north relay.

chupakabras
11-15-2007, 05:47 PM
first of all, glad to hear that everyone is ok,. and second, as you described, how that happend, looks like the same that happend to us we were stuck on the edge of the cliff, and we went down trying to get unstuck, and also was beyond midnight, and of course, we also didn't know that we were on the edge of a cliff, i'm pretty sure they didn't knew that too, i don't know why but my turn to drive at baja always is under the light of the moon or whitout moon, always at night, so having that experience i'm very focus on reading the terrain, to know exactly where we are, to believe that everything can happen, but well, thk god no one is seriusly injured, see yahh then.

pigracing
11-15-2007, 08:15 PM
Wow that's some crazy stuff. Glad to hear everyones ok. That must have been one stout cage.

fj40
11-15-2007, 11:34 PM
Kudos to the guys on 302, glad to hear everyone is OK.

Gummi Bear
11-19-2007, 10:51 AM
I was sure glad to read that everyone is OK.

We were right behind Pikes chase crew on the highway, and talked to them just outside of El Rosario, details were still sketchy then, they were just trying to get to the racer, and their drivers. Info on the Weatherman was making it confusing to understand what the situation really was.

BajaBronco13
11-19-2007, 05:22 PM
Hey Gummi,

That was the crash right before Catavina between two trucks hitting head up, correct? I ended up driving past it what looked like a few minutes after it happen because there were others already stopped. It looked pretty bad. Both trucks had the front ends destroyed. Me and my nephews said a prayer for those guys. I heard later on that everyone was fine.

Chris

Blanco
11-19-2007, 05:49 PM
Hey Gummi,

That was the crash right before Catavina between two trucks hitting head up, correct? I ended up driving past it what looked like a few minutes after it happen because there were others already stopped. It looked pretty bad. Both trucks had the front ends destroyed. Me and my nephews said a prayer for those guys. I heard later on that everyone was fine.

Chris

Chris, Your mixing up two completely different stories..

I was just sent this From Tony T..


The guys from 876 were not as bad as 1st thought but far from fine..
& the story below................................Well......... .....Just read it.
------------------------------------------------------

Here is an e-mail I sent out only hours after I got the REAL story from the people who were there.





Unfortunatley, yes, Fred was killed in the car accident.

My Step-Dad held his hand until his final breath, and he and Earl Hardesty helped get Fred's body back home.

Fred's son was also in the truck, but only bruised and battered. The truck that hit them was a member of the #106 chase team. 106 was Cam Theroit. They dropped a wheel off the right hand side of the road and over corrected back into the other lane hitting Fred and his son head on completely destroying the truck. Fred was pinned between the steering wheel and the seat and Howard and Earl could do nothing to get him free. They think Fred's son is only OK because of the airbag. So they waited for an ambulance and it took almost three hours for one to arrive. Howard says the ambulance drivers were very slow and didn't really try to help in a hurry at all. Fred passed on the way to the hospital in San Quintin after he was extracted from his truck.

Fred was one of my parents' best friends, along with his wife and friends. They had just spent the last two weeks in Sedona with the Reva's. Fred and Doris always came to the desert with us on Thanksgiving. It is all still so shocking to us. I just found out tonight when I got home from the race.

Three seconds sooner and I would be writing about my own step-dad, three seconds later and we wouldn't be writing about this at all.

In addition to prayers and thoughts for Fred's family, please send some toward my step-dad as he is taking this very hard and feels he should have been able to do more to save his friend.



Wally
----------------------------------------------------------

Thats what I truely Hate/Fear about mexican roads!
There so DAMN NARROW!

Why is that? :confused:

So this guy was probably on one of the many HWYs that have black top on the lanes then about 10 inches of shoulder before they drop any where between 5 inches to a couple feet!

Thats the one part about Baja I hate..

My drive back to Ensenada from Mikes Sky Ranch was sorta scary.
Once you get up into the hills, the shoulder( better called the thin lip ) pass the painted lane is tiny & theres no gaurd rails to keep you from driving off if you somehow screwed up.

Then you have 18wheelers come at you & also having to use your lane as well as theirs while going through the turns.

I understand the mentallity is probably mostly for drainage when it rains they need deep channels to flow the water in.
Yet at the same time if your wheel drops in there, your probably gonna stay there for a while.

I feel for both parties involved in this one. :(

BajaBronco13
11-19-2007, 07:24 PM
I drove down highway 1 to Catavina and that was truly one scary f--king road with big rigs blasting through and unfortunately a lot of chase crews were doing the same. My prayers go out to that family that lost their loved one.

Chris