Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor

   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor #21  
Years ago I had quite the knee surgery. I had my ACL replaced with a cadaver ligament, MCL repaired, two torn meniscus repaired. A much more severe operation than yours, but I was walking in a couple of days and with a lot of physical therapy I was back to sports in a matter of months. Good luck on your recovery. Take it easy at first and make sure that you are doing of the PT that is recommended.
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor
  • Thread Starter
#22  
archerynut said:
Years ago I had quite the knee surgery. I had my ACL replaced with a cadaver ligament, MCL repaired, two torn meniscus repaired. A much more severe operation than yours, but I was walking in a couple of days and with a lot of physical therapy I was back to sports in a matter of months. Good luck on your recovery. Take it easy at first and make sure that you are doing of the PT that is recommended.

May 19th, 2000 I had my ACL replaced and most of my medial meniscus scraped out because it looked like "crabmeat" according to the Doc. They used the middle 1/3rd of my Patellar Tendon as the donor for a new ACL. You are right, it hurt like the dickens. I was 33 at the time, best shape of my life and it took me 6 months before I was fully over it. I know exactly what you mean...it's the same knee that screwed up again.

Arthroscopic surgery is relatively painless compared to the full blown surgery I had before.
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor #23  
"Uncle Bob"

Okay, what does it mean?? :D I'm not military so it's fair to let me know.:D :D

And being the proverbial 98# specimen in bodybuilder adds of years ago backpacks of 40 pounds and over don't intrigue me!:D
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Egon said:
Okay, what does it mean?? :D I'm not military so it's fair to let me know.:D :D

And being the proverbial 98# specimen in bodybuilder adds of years ago backpacks of 40 pounds and over don't intrigue me!:D

I thought it would be cool if "Patrick G" (who isn't a submariner) could blow his friends mind by using a brevity-code word from within their community. Knowing the Navy, the word has probably changed in meaning, but there's a chance that it hasn't. If that's the case and he says it to them, they'll all look at each other like "how did he know this"? It will be good for a chuckle. That's all I'm saying;)
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor #25  
Podunkadunk said:
Ask your submariner friends what "Uncle Bob" is. They'll know what you are talking about, but I doubt they'll tell you;)

I was a Flight Engineer aboard the P-3 Orion...subkiller.

You got me there, I'll have to ask some of my "contacts." I was on an LA class nuke when I was at SUBASE San Diego and attended ASW school at San Diego but don't recall hearing about Uncle Bob. Maybe my sidebars with instructors about Red Storm Rising (the game) or my after lunch nap got in the way.

I only got into in-depth analysis of one ASW platform, the LAMPS-MK III paired with a DD-963 (Spruance class.) Our lab was big into ASW. I have also toured aboard some big grey Russian things the first time they held "open house" alongside North Island. I got to inspect their version of a LAMPS chopper, topside only of a missile frigate, and an oiler that had a sauna and small pool on board for the officers recreation. That was the first time I ever heard of a Soviet man of war puling alongside at North Island and having an"open house." The crews got taken to old town for lunch and a brief shopping trip. I traded solar powered calculators and such for all sorts of uniform items, medals, pins, etc.

Pat
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor
  • Thread Starter
#26  
patrick_g said:
You got me there, I'll have to ask some of my "contacts." I was on an LA class nuke when I was at SUBASE San Diego and attended ASW school at San Diego but don't recall hearing about Uncle Bob. Maybe my sidebars with instructors about Red Storm Rising (the game) or my after lunch nap got in the way.

I only got into in-depth analysis of one ASW platform, the LAMPS-MK III paired with a DD-963 (Spruance class.) Our lab was big into ASW. I have also toured aboard some big grey Russian things the first time they held "open house" alongside North Island. I got to inspect their version of a LAMPS chopper, topside only of a missile frigate, and an oiler that had a sauna and small pool on board for the officers recreation. That was the first time I ever heard of a Soviet man of war puling alongside at North Island and having an"open house." The crews got taken to old town for lunch and a brief shopping trip. I traded solar powered calculators and such for all sorts of uniform items, medals, pins, etc.

Pat

I spoke to a "friend" who is still in the business, he said there isn't a classification on "Uncle Bob" these days...so here goes...

"Uncle Bob" was the brevity-code word for an LA Class Fast Attack Submarine back in the cold war days...more especially the 80's and early, early 90's. It was a way of talking about it, without the world knowing what you were talking about, whether on radio communications or out in public. This precaution was/is because U.S. Naval Submarine movements/whereabouts are TOP SECRET, just as their Hertz (Hz) signature lines (the digital gram lines denoting their "noise" in the water) are.

Back then, we would fly missions looking for Soviet Submarines. It was part of the "game"...they would stalk our ships, subs...we'd stalk them. Most of the time, we'd stay passive and they wouldn't know we were there, unless we screwed up by flying to low to the water or pass too closely to them. In that situation they would "hear" us flying over...the P-3, has a distinct Hertz line, or signature, just like everything else in the water...no two are identical, that's why it's called a "signature". Sometimes, we'd let them know we were there either by intentionally flying too closely to where we know they are, or by dropping "active" sonar buoys...basically pinging the **** out of them. Being "active" has it's drawbacks though...I'll get to one instance in a moment.

We were on patrol in the Mediterranean Sea in the early 90's. We were tracking a Victor III class submarine. Anyhow, we WERE NOT authorized to go active, we didn't know why, we didn't ask...(in the military you don't ask, you just do what you are ordered). Well, to make a long story shorter, we had been tracking this guy for hours, passively, without him knowing we were there. We accidentally dropped an active sonar buoy and accidentally lit it off. The Sensor Operator in the back of the plane starting yelling over ICS (Internal Communication System), Uncle Bob, Uncle Bob...we knew we were screwed.

You see, unbeknownst to us, (but our superiors knew, thus no "active" authorization) there was an LA Class submarine shadowing this guy. He had been there for days without the Soviets knowing. We lit off an active buoy which:
A. Let the Soviet Sub know we were there
B. Let the Soviet Sub know that not only were we there, but we gave our sub "Uncle Bob's" position away to the Soviets.
C. Pissed the crew of Uncle Bob off!!!!
D. Got us into serious HOT WATER with our Commanders.

Needless to say, when an active buoy "pings" everyone hears it...if there's one return...one sub. Two returns...two subs!

You get the picture. Now you know about Uncle Bob!
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor #27  
But Patrick, I have been working on my cursive in what little snow we get :)

70 lbs....
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor #28  
mjarrels said:
Can be very serious... many years ago, local beef farmer (neighbor) slipped getting off the tractor (Oliver). Did't think too much about it until he died a few days later... blood clot hit the ole heart.

mark

Mark, that's an odd coincidence. When we moved to our place in the country and quickly became friends with our nearest neighbor, we learned that he'd had some serious knee surgery, followed by a massive infection, and was off his feet for nearly a year. But he had recovered 3 or 4 years before we moved there. But one day, he was putting hay out (round bales) with a hay fork on the 3-point hitch on his 85hp Oliver and he had to stop to open a gate. At that time, he had cattle on both sides of that gate and he didn't want them to get mixed. So his plan was to open the gate, jump on the tractor, get through the gate, jump back down, and close the gate before any of the cattle got through. Yep, he slipped, twisted a knee, and fell when he was hurrying to get off the close the gate. At least he didn't die like your friend, but he was laid up for awhile, and I put the hay out with his Oliver for a few days.

This knee surgery thing seems to be getting out of hand; everyone having it. This morning, I went to see my Beltone hearing aid dealer and she just had knee surgery. Thursday, we went to the Dallas RV Show and I told my wife I figure I'd need knee surgery before I could get in and out on the steps of those RVs very much.

Even our year and a half old Chihuahua had knee surgery yesterday.:eek: I'd never heard of a "luxating patella" until a month ago.:(
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor #29  
Podunk, Nice story. I worked directly for the base commander of SUBASE San Diego for a year and attended his staff meetings. Never heard the phrase. Had familiarization tour aboard LA fast attack and except for not getting to see a couple of the screens saw it all, including the MK 48 wire guided with war shots. It was never mentioned in my presence at ASW school. I guess they were seriously close mouthed, need to know discipline. I was TS SCI with oodles of compartments but need to know governs. This was mid 80's and as you know the cold war was alive and well.

Gee I wonder if I could have looked it up in a Jane's glossary?

Pat
 
   / Knee surgery today caused by getting off tractor
  • Thread Starter
#30  
PatrickG,
Yeah, those were the "good ole days"...80's in the military...Reagan was Pres, then Bush Sr., plenty of budget, plenty of operations. Back then we had 3 guys to do one man's job...now it's the other way around. I left the Military in 2004.

When I called up my friend this morning to ask if Uncle Bob was still a buzzword, of course he said no (thus, the posting). It was funny, I asked him what it is now...very funny. I don't even have to tell you what he said.:eek:

Bird,
Yeah, I hear ya on all the knee surgery's going around. It's amazing, they do arthroscopic surgery these days and it's outpatient. I was moving around well the next day...almost like I didn't even have surgery.

The sad part is the Doc told me that when I am older, 60's or so, I'll have to have knee replacement surgery. I'm not looking forward to that at all.

Good evening to all,
Podunk
 

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