Kernopelli
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2006
- Messages
- 2,209
- Location
- Carterville, Illinois
- Tractor
- Mitsubishi MTE2000D, Dig It 258 Mini Ex, Deere Z930A ZTR
I was on my way home from work last night and it was spitting rain and about 28 degrees all evening. I was aware the bridges on the interstate were ice covered and was taking great care when crossing them. I knew the vehicle behind me was a fellow DOC officer and I watched him in the rear view lose control crossing a bridge and spin off into the median. I turned around and came back on the other side of the interstate to assist. What transpired next was akin to watching a slow motion train wreck for the next 15 minutes. vehicle after vehicle came across that bridge and lost control, some spinning into the median and some gliding across the bridge against the guard rail in showers of sparks. We were busy watching traffic and warning the ones that that stopped or were stuck, to get out of their vehicles and get to a safe distance outside the guard rails because more vehicles would likely be piling up. Sure enough, a mini van comes across and gets completely sideways and when they hit dry pavement shot head on into the guard rail HARD. I couldn't get to them for fear of other traffic and had to stand there dodging several more cars sliding through the median. A minivan puling a Uhaul was next to hit hard and they jack-knifed and came to rest against the rail and blocking one lane, behind them was three semis, one pulling a double. The first semi crushed he minivan and put it on it's side but he was able to stay straight and clear the scene, the second semi steered right trying to avoid the van/uhaul and vaporized the uhaul before going through the guard rail and down a 45 degree embankment on his side. the third semi (pulling doubles) hit the seconds trailer and ripped through the rear of his trailer and jack-knifed into the median (straight toward me, and YES, I was already running for my life to hop the guardrail on the other side of the interstate. Fortunately, the next group of traffic stopped at the far end of the bridge and stopped/blocked traffic. The other officer and I were able to check the first van to wreck and they were OK. The van pulling the Uhaul was on its side and crushed. I kicked out the windshield and got the driver out and the other DOC officer was able to get up on the van and pry the door open and we pulled a baby, a young handicapped girl and their father out. We then slid down the embankment and was able to talk the stunned driver into climbing up and out the passenger door and climb down far enough that we could reach him and lift him to the ground, all the while, a flood of diesel was pouring across our feet and into the engine compartment. Everybody walked away.....it was nothing short of a true, God blessed miracle.
All I can say, is life is so fragile and it can be snuffed out in a matter of seconds in a horrible, destructive way. It literally looked like a war zone and obliterated everything. 12 hours later, they are still clearing the scene of wreckage. Since I witnessed all this, I was asked several times what happened and I kept trying to explain that there was a uhaul somewhere there. I started looking for it and couldn't even find the axle, just some shreds of aluminum panel is all I could find to prove it was once there.
Everybody who crashed seemed stunned that it was so slick when it just looked a little wet....a lesson we can all learn from.
All I can say, is life is so fragile and it can be snuffed out in a matter of seconds in a horrible, destructive way. It literally looked like a war zone and obliterated everything. 12 hours later, they are still clearing the scene of wreckage. Since I witnessed all this, I was asked several times what happened and I kept trying to explain that there was a uhaul somewhere there. I started looking for it and couldn't even find the axle, just some shreds of aluminum panel is all I could find to prove it was once there.
Everybody who crashed seemed stunned that it was so slick when it just looked a little wet....a lesson we can all learn from.